Shortcuts
Please wait while page loads.
LiberoBanner . Default .
PageMenu- Main Menu-
Page content

Catalogue Display

The Day the war came

A powerful and necessary picture book – the journey of a child forced to become a refugee when war destroys everything she has ever known. Imagine if, on an ordinary day, war came. Imagine it turned your town to rubble. Imagine going on a long and difficult journey – all alone. Imagine finding no welcome at the end of it. Then imagine a child who gives you something small but very, very precious... When the government refused to allow 3000 child refugees to enter this country in 2016, Nicola Davies was so angry she wrote a poem. It started a campaign for which artists contributed drawings of chairs, symbolising a seat in a classroom, education, kindness, the hope of a future. The poem has become this book, movingly illustrated by Rebecca Cobb, which should prove a powerful aid for explaining the ongoing refugee crisis to younger readers.

Item Information
Barcode Shelf Location Collection Volume Ref. Branch Status Due Date Res.
32320004387142 E
Easy Picture Book   East Maitland library . . Available .  
. Catalogue Record 484837 ItemInfo Beginning of record . Catalogue Record 484837 ItemInfo Top of page .
Catalogue Information
Field name Details
ISBN 9781406376326 (Hardcover)
Classification Number E
Author Davies, Nicola, 1958-
Title The Day the war came [BK]
Physical Description colour illustrations ;
A powerful and necessary picture book – the journey of a child forced to become a refugee when war destroys everything she has ever known. Imagine if, on an ordinary day, war came. Imagine it turned your town to rubble. Imagine going on a long and difficult journey – all alone. Imagine finding no welcome at the end of it. Then imagine a child who gives you something small but very, very precious... When the government refused to allow 3000 child refugees to enter this country in 2016, Nicola Davies was so angry she wrote a poem. It started a campaign for which artists contributed drawings of chairs, symbolising a seat in a classroom, education, kindness, the hope of a future. The poem has become this book, movingly illustrated by Rebecca Cobb, which should prove a powerful aid for explaining the ongoing refugee crisis to younger readers.
Classification For children.
Subject Refugee children
Refugee children -- Education
Unaccompanied refugee children
War and society
Refugee children -- Pictorial works -- Juvenile fiction
Refugee children -- Education -- Pictorial works -- Juvenile fiction
War and society -- Pictorial works -- Juvenile fiction
Unaccompanied refugee children -- Pictorial works -- Juvenile fiction
Children's stories -- Pictorial works
Children's stories
Additional Author Cobb, Rebecca.
Catalogue Information 484837 Beginning of record . Catalogue Information 484837 Top of page .
Quick Search