A book that is about to be published, showing it in advance. Bird Hero’s introduction is really well written :)Original address:“Look What I Have” — A Guide to Anthony Brown’s Picture Bookauthor:Hanmiao Creative Park![[Repost] "Look What I Have" - A Guide to Anthony Brown's Picture Book [转载]《看看我有什么》为安东尼.布朗的图画书写的导读](https://ajia.site/blog/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/67a112fft9e2cdb2f826f.jpg)
The editors at Enlightenment asked me to write the introduction to Anthony Brown’s “new book,” Look What I’ve Got. Of course, it’s not a new book; for the author, it’s an older work, and for the publisher, it’s a new and exciting product. I’ve never written an introduction before, but fortunately, I’ve had some experience with children. Ajia’s fluent translation made it easy for me, a person with limited English, to grasp the story and delve into the humanity behind it—children, too, possess a full spectrum of humanity. I loved the two boys in the book, Sam and Jamie, and felt a sense of familiarity. Perhaps they represent the two sides of many children’s hearts, or perhaps even my own. Thanks to Anthony Brown, you’ve made me think.
The story goes something like this:
The boy Sam went out for a walk and Jamie showed off his new bike to him.
“Look what I got!” Jamie said. “I bet you want one, too.”
But Sam didn’t show any envy or flattery. When Jamie was showing off, he broke himself and his car, and Sam helped him up.
Jamie also showed off his new football, lots of snacks, and his gorilla’s new outfit to Sam, always saying, “Look what I got!”
He was sure Sam wanted it too, but Sam really didn’t want it. He was always so calm, and no one knew what he was thinking. Jamie was always the unlucky one, being scolded by the administrator, getting a stomachache, and being chased and bitten by dogs.
Jamie was beaten up by the girl and fell into the river. Sam pulled him up, but Jamie still wanted to be stubborn and racked his brains to think of something to show off, but he no longer had the confidence.
Sam was unmoved. At the end of the picture book, the author reveals that Sam is a child with a self-sufficient and beautiful heart, and he does not need what Jamie needs.
Alas, I didn’t explain it well, so you should go read the new book.
Introduction to Look What I Have
Han Miao/Bird Hero
Sam and Jamie are two completely different kinds of boys. First, I don’t want to knee-jerk judgments about good and evil, right and wrong; that would be unfair to both protagonists. “Possession” is a challenge for both adults and children. In the adult world, when one possesses a nice house, a nice car, fine clothes, and delicious food, one inevitably experiences a surge of pride: “Look what I have!” Then, one becomes convinced, “I bet you want it too.” One judges others by their own standards—yes, there are no gentlemen or villains here. Jamie’s endearing quality lies in his willingness to speak freely, and Sam’s endearing quality lies in his honesty. When it comes to honesty, the two children are equally matched. Adults aren’t as generous.
Good picture books can give people a more comprehensive worldview. Analyzing Sam and Jamie is like watching your own mirror image, provided that you try not to treat an interesting book as a moral lesson.
Sam is a boy with a strong heart, needing no external support. Jamie, on the other hand, is completely different; he needs numerous external things to prove his strength. This boy is a comic relief, a troublemaker and a little loser, always paying the price for his vanity. Because of his inner strength (though he’s unaware of it), children like Sam are able to remain unaffected by the troubles Jamie throws at them. However, such boys are difficult to understand. You can’t tell what they’re thinking, and their emotions don’t show on their face, let alone express easily. For parents, children like Jamie are easier to handle.
When Chinese parents read picture books to their children, they inevitably ask: Should we emulate Sam or Jamie? Most children and parents likely lean toward Sam, as he seems more perfect, while Jamie seems like a counterexample. But I doubt this was Anthony Brown’s intention. He uses an entertaining, highly refined approach to depict two highly archetypal human personalities: one with a comedic realism (Jamie), the other with a cool idealism (Sam). The author aims for objectivity and non-judgment, like two boxes of chocolate on a supermarket shelf, each packaged in a distinct way, letting you choose. Imagine how dull life would be without people like Jamie! Jamie’s flaws are simply more obvious, while Sam lives in his own world. That’s all.
Let’s take a look inside Sam’s mind.
Unlike Jamie’s description, where every thought and action is directly stated, Anthony Brown doesn’t explicitly articulate Sam’s thoughts. Throughout the book, this boy’s actions are almost exclusively “walking”—“Sam went out for a walk,” “Sam strolled to the park,” “Sam walked past the store,” “Sam continued walking,” and so on. This boy truly loves walking, yet he walks silently, head down, what is he thinking? Under Anthony Brown’s magical brush, ears grow on the wall, moose antlers hang clothes for hanging, letter slots on doors bar their white teeth, people stroll with fish, and so on. You could call this a master’s consistent technique, but I prefer to see it as Sam’s own vision. Sam is a boy with a delicate heart and a quiet personality, yet he has his own perseverance. He tirelessly walks (or strolls), and his vision of the ordinary world always adds extraordinary details, making it full of interest.
When I teach children, I always encourage them to appreciate the sentient nature of all things. Every stone, every leaf, has its own expression and story. Seeing with the eyes and feeling with the heart, the world of sentient beings is far more fascinating than the so-called real world of cars being cars and houses being houses. Children’s eyes and hearts are open to this; they truly believe the world is truly colorful. Jamie, on the other hand, sees things from an adult perspective, using the new, the good, the more, the more powerful as a source of flaunting, unconsciously falling into the trap of material comparison. There’s no end to this; something newer, better, more numerous, and more powerful than yours is constantly emerging, just like the girls dressed as pirates who took down Jamie. Jamie, however, still stubbornly defends himself, saying, “My dad’s taking me to the zoo this afternoon,” but he remains a slave to comparison. In the last picture, the author is no longer vague (although the text only has the sentence “But Sam wasn’t listening”), and directly describes the world that Sam sees: his forest is both a forest and not a forest, with all kinds of animals appearing and disappearing in it. This is a paradise built with inner strength, and the joy is endless, which cannot be told to outsiders. How can Jamie and others understand the beauty of it?
I was amazed after closing the book. The numerous details designed by Anthony Brown throughout the book are by no means gimmicks irrelevant to the theme, but rather a portrayal of the protagonist’s inner world.
A friend once told me this analogy: the power of a lion versus the power of an elephant. A lion has sharp fangs and claws, and its muscles are sturdy. But when it encounters a lion with sharper claws and stronger muscles, it must compete fiercely, attacking herbivores to increase its chances of predation, and constantly ensuring its claws and muscles surpass those of other lions. Finally, with luck, one lion will rise to become the king of the grasslands—a rare event, yet, under the pretext of “in today’s fiercely competitive society…”, it has become the main theme of our education for young people. We always emphasize lions and ignore elephants. Elephants are herbivores, not harming other animals, but quietly building themselves up to become giants, until even the strongest lions have to retreat. Who is stronger, the lion or the elephant?
Just like my analysis of Sam and Jamie, I’m reluctant to pronounce on whether lions or elephants are better. These are two different ways of growing up, and everyone has the right to choose. I’m simply delighted to discover that Sam and Jamie in this picture book are two very different kinds of children. One, like the elephant, quietly grows by building himself and nurturing his inner blossom, while the other, like the lion, is destined to grow up amidst constant attacks and setbacks. Even someone as frustrated as Jamie can still grow. Life is fair. This is the meaning I derived from reading Anthony Brown’s “Look What I’ve Got.”
Oh, how fragile the material world that is readily available is. Let’s guide children to explore and create a wider world on their own. In this way, whether they become an elephant, a lion, or even a little white rabbit, they will be successful!
A few bonus pictures:
![[Repost] "Look What I Have" - A Guide to Anthony Brown's Picture Book [转载]《看看我有什么》为安东尼.布朗的图画书写的导读](https://ajia.site/blog/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/67a112fft9e2da070f065.jpg)
![[Repost] "Look What I Have" - A Guide to Anthony Brown's Picture Book [转载]《看看我有什么》为安东尼.布朗的图画书写的导读](https://ajia.site/blog/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/67a112fft9e2da1ab8b8a.jpg)
![[Repost] "Look What I Have" - A Guide to Anthony Brown's Picture Book [转载]《看看我有什么》为安东尼.布朗的图画书写的导读](https://ajia.site/blog/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/67a112fft9e2dbe45f0bf.jpg)
![[Repost] "Look What I Have" - A Guide to Anthony Brown's Picture Book [转载]《看看我有什么》为安东尼.布朗的图画书写的导读](https://ajia.site/blog/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/67a112fft9e2da37849a5.jpg)
![[Repost] "Look What I Have" - A Guide to Anthony Brown's Picture Book [转载]《看看我有什么》为安东尼.布朗的图画书写的导读](https://ajia.site/blog/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/67a112fft9e2da6296c09.jpg)
![[Repost] "Look What I Have" - A Guide to Anthony Brown's Picture Book [转载]《看看我有什么》为安东尼.布朗的图画书写的导读](https://ajia.site/blog/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/67a112fft9e2da6bfbbc9.jpg)