Free Fall is a wordless picture book, created and illustrated by David Wiesner, author and illustrator of many such books who has been awarded the Caldecott Medal three times and the Caldecott Honor thrice as well. Free Fall is one of Mr. Wiesner’s three Caldecott Honor books.
This book was donated to my library. I had never seen it before, but I picked it up to show to my five year old granddaughter. She immediately engaged with the story and delighted in the idea that she could “read” this book herself by telling the story that she saw in the pictures. This kind of reading seems like good practice for Charlotte Mason-style narration and picture study if that is what you want to use as a learning tool later on your child’s education.
The first page of this book shows a boy asleep in bed with an open book on his chest. He’s obviously fallen asleep while reading. On the next page, we see that the book is a book of maps, and one of the pages floats out into the outdoors. Perhaps into the boy’s dreams?
From there, I’ll leave you to make up your own story. The boy encounter kings and queens, castles and chess pieces, knights and an odd-looking alien creature, pigs in the city and in the desert, and many other weird, strange dreamlike landscapes and events. Eventually, he flies through the air, and then floats on a large leaf. Just as dream images are only connected by our own imagination into a somewhat coherent story, the images and pictures in this book are left for your imagination to tie together into a narrative.
And it’s hard not to try to make the picture into a story that has a beginning, a middle, and an end. Of course, the book itself does begin with a boy asleep and end with him waking up in the morning, with a few of the images from his dreams sitting on the bedside table. But the middle, the dream sequence, does lose the thread of plot from page to page, even though some of the images keep returning. Anyway, it’s a fun exercise in imagination and storytelling and fantasy.
If you know Chris Van Allsburg’s Ben’s Dream or if you’ve read Alice in Wonderland, you will be reminded of those books when you read this dreamy picture book by David Wiesner. For more books like this one, check out:
- Journey by Aaron Becker. Using a red marker, a young girl draws a door on her bedroom wall and through it enters another world where she experiences many adventures, including being captured by an evil emperor.
- Dreams by Peter Spier. Two children find fantastic pictures in the clouds.
- Flotsam, also by David Wiesner. A camera goes floating through and under the sea, taking pictures as it goes?
- Tar Beach by Faith Ringgold. A young girl dreams of flying above her Harlem home, claiming all she sees for herself and her family.
- The aforementioned Ben’s Dream by Chris Van Allsberg. Ben has a dream in which he and his house float by the monuments of the world, half submerged in flood water.









