Here Comes Ingo by Odeta Xheka

Review Copy Courtesy of Odeta Xheka

Where to Find Here Comes Ingo:

[Affiliate Link] Amazon 
[Local Bookstore] Indiebound
[Library] Worldcat

Here Comes Ingo is unlike any picture book I’ve ever read or seen before. Author and artist, Odeta Xheka uses abstract collage and says that her book, “exemplifies a progression of thinking leading towards love, kindness and inclusion because the world needs more empathetic, understand and tolerant children.”

From Here Comes Ingo. Image Courtesy of Odeta Xheka

And it’s interesting because when it comes to this book, I am honestly lost. There is so much about this book that I do not understand. But what’s fun is that the kids have zero problem following through the story and that makes for a neat role-reversal where they clearly understand something way better than I do.

When they look through it they ooh, and ahh, and giggle, and point, and get excited. When I read through it I feel like I’m swimming and looking for something, anything to latch on to – because it is the most dream-like book I’ve ever experienced and my brain really wants it to make sense – at least in an analytical way. But I don’t think Xheka is particularly interested in this book being analytical at all. She has other goals. She wants us to, “keep an open mind in order to embrace what at first may seem strange. Remember, it is very important to learn how to be understanding, tolerant and kind.”

This book, as you can see from the images, is very surreal and pushes the boundaries of logic and coherence in ways that I have not seen in a picture book for children. It’s a disorienting experience (at least for me, again, kids don’t seem to have any problems with it). But it is not an unpleasant experience at all. Have you ever experienced art where afterwards you think, “I like it. I don’t think I really understand what’s going on here – but I’m okay with that.” I wonder if reading this book is like a seed being planted – and I’ll understand it one day randomly while doing something else.

From Here Comes Ingo. Image Courtesy of Odeta Xheka

What’s also unique about this book is that I’m usually the one helming the storyline with wordless picture books, but with Here Comes Ingo my children are in charge — and it is amazing to watch my kids tell me the story. They genuinely enjoy and have a great time explaining to me what and how and why — and it is never the same experience twice.

But even with my own sense of disorientation – the book is very interesting and fun to look at. It’s very, very strange on some pages, very beautiful on others, and sometimes the pages are both beautiful and strange.

From Here Comes Ingo. Image Courtesy of Odeta Xheka

If I had to sum up one way to describe the illustrations and the whole book, it would be as phantasmagorical – “having a fantastic or deceptive appearance, as something in a dream or created by the imagination.”

But whether the illustrations make sense to you or not, the bright colors grab you immediately – and demand for you to stop, look, and check in with yourself that you are really seeing what you think you’re seeing. And there’s something about these images that calls to me – where just because I don’t understand something completely (or sometimes at all) doesn’t mean that I can’t appreciate that there’s a distinct beauty to them.

Xheka says on the back of her book that, “this wordless picture book familiarizes children with figurative art collage.” And her book definitely does that. Her illustrations inspire my children and have my boys asking where the scissors are so that they can go and create their own collages. There’s an honesty and rawness about the images that makes my kids say, “I want to create, too.”

One thing I love about having my blog is that I get to learn about books that I never would have learned about otherwise – and I’m so glad to have learned about this book and to have had this unique experience with my children.

Where Obtained:  I received a review copy from the publisher. No other compensation was received. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

FTC Disclosures:  Some of the links in the post above are Amazon affiliate links and others are IndieBound affiliate links. If you click on the link and purchase something, I will receive an affiliate commission at no additional cost to you. Which goes to fund my family’s picture book habit.  It’s a vicious cycle, but we manage.  I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

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