The Lost Property Office
by Emily Rand
Interest age: 4 to 7
Reading age: 5+
Published by Tate Publishing, 2018
About this book
On her way to see her grandpa on the train with Mummy, a little girl leaves her teddy on the train. Despite being offered another teddy to cuddle, it’s just not the same.
Fortunately, Grandpa has a brainwave and takes the little girl to the Lost Property Office, which is full of all manner of amazing things people have lost on trains –footballs, bouncers, violins, false teeth and even a frying pan. But there, among all the lost teddies belonging to other children, is her teddy. Thank goodness!
Emily Rand’s simple story about the experience of losing something on a train is reassuringly lovely. For children, the knowledge that there are places where lost things are kept until you’re ready to find them is a comforting thought.
However, it’s also Rand’s vivid depiction of the amazing, exciting and varied Lost Property Office (reminiscent of the legendary London Underground Lost Property Office, which contains everything from false teeth and prosthetic limbs to scarves, books and toys) that adds a sense of mystery and fascination to an ordinary, everyday thing.
More books like this
-
Underground: Subway Systems Around the World
by Uijung Kim
4 to 9 years
-
The Lost Homework
by Richard O’Neill, illustrated by Kirsti Beautyman
4 to 9 years
-
The Day the Crayons Came Home
by Oliver Jeffers, illustrated by Oliver Jeffers
4 to 9 years
-
Stop the Ball!
author-illustrator Susanne Strasser
1 to 5 years
Lists of recommended reads
-
Books about trains
Trains - and books set on trains - have been popular since George Stephenson's first steam locomotive for public railways in 1825. This selection of train books spans a childhood, from babies to young teenagers. Not just for train fans!