A warm, gentle mini graphic novel about a young boy, Tom, who takes his grandfather, Collar, out for a walk with him down the country lane. Collar, so called because his grandson drags him everywhere on a lead, begrudgingly joins his grandson on a walk down the country lane: he'd much prefer to be reading the newspaper.
Upon the walk, he discovers that his grandson has decided to name several puddles upon the path after people who matter to him. When he sees that the puddles are all dried up, he leaves Collar to chat to a fellow villager and heads off to find a solution. Enter the Puddleman who, through 'suspended animation' manages to carry all the puddles on his back. Together they find the right puddle for the right hole. When they're done, the little boy fetches his grandfather who, much to his bemusement, finds that the once-empty puddles are now full. With no answer for this conundrum, he carries his grandson home upon his shoulders.
It felt, in reading this, that Briggs was beginning to soften in his grumpy old age. This time, Grandad is out there with his grandchild listening to his imaginative recreations and stories. There's no admonishment here, perhaps a pinch of disbelief, but a willingness to go along and appease. As always, Briggs' soft, coloured pencil illustrations lend a heightened sense of familial warmth that only he is capable of. A lovely celebration of the imagination and pricelessness of those intergenerational relationships.