I was strolling along the aisles at the library and had a chance encounter with this book which was on display. I enjoyed it so much I ended up buying a copy!
The only words in the book are places and times, everything else is just pictures. They say a picture speaks a thousand words. Then, a 100 pictures must speak a 100,000 words - and that is indeed what this book did. It took me all of half an hour to "read" it cover to cover, but it gave me the feeling of having finished a full-length novel. One could flip through it in minutes, but the book implores you to slow down, for the slower you read, the more you gain.
The book tells a beautiful story beautifully. Haugomat plays with just a few colours to create simple yet stunning art. The overarching theme for the pictures is looking through things - could be a window, a screen, a crack. They are arranged very nicely, such that each spread is self-contained. For e.g., the picture on one side of a spread might show someone peering into a microscope and the picture on the other side might show what's being studied. This gives us dual perspectives - one capturing the character externally, and another through their eyes. The first creates expectation, and the second fulfils it - a mystery, followed by a reveal. Haugomat's finesse shows in how everything on the left is also distant and muted, while everything on the right is upfront and vibrant. I found this juxtaposing to be brilliant.
And there‘s more poetry among the pages. The coda at the end was especially bittersweet. The main character returns to his childhood home and finds solace in studying and preserving the same insects that fascinated him in his youth; he comes full circle. The end of the protagonist’s life is implied by a shattered magnifying glass. What comes right after delivers a heartbreak: full page depictions of how the world goes on as if nothing happened. House standing window ajar, birds perched lines sagging, red sky soaring plane. Perfect tableaux. Words couldn’t have expressed it better.
Finally, this book is also a nostalgic ode to space. All space lovers will have lots to appreciate in it - the moon landing, Columbia and Challenger, Ursa Minor, 2001, HST, and more. Historical events are accurately interlaced with the story adding gravitas to it.