Pages & CO.: The Bookwanderers

Anna James

Children Ages 8-12

Tilly Pages usually finds comfort in the pages of a book, where she can forget her troubles at school or the fact that her mom disappeared shortly after she was born. However, when Tilly begins to interact with characters from her favorite stories, such as Alice from Wonderland and Anne of Green Gables, she wonders what in the world is going on. Before she knows what is happening, Tilly and her neighbor Oskar are wandering through the real-life scenes of many beloved books and set out on a journey to solve the puzzle of her mom’s disappearance.

Note to Parents: The book mentions multiple times that Tilly’s parents were never married. Eventually, the reader learns that Tilly’s dad is Captain Crewe, Sarah’s father in “A Little Princess.” Below, we provide questions to help your children think through this biblically. However, we know this situation may cause some parents not to want to engage with the book.

Questions Just for Fun

If you could be friends with any fictional character, who would you choose and what would you do together with them?

If you could bookwander, which book would you choose to wander in and why?

Questions to Think Critically and Biblically

Anne Shirley is shocked when she learns that Oskar’s parents are divorced, and Tilly’s parents were never married. However, Tillly informs her, “All this is more common where we’re from. Lots of people’s parents aren’t married. It's just the way things are sometimes. There are lots of different-shaped families.” Tilly is correct that parents who divorce or who were never married are common in our world. However, what is God’s design for the family?
Discussion Guide - Read Genesis 2:23-24 and Matthew 19:3-9. Discuss how God’s design is for a man and woman to enter into the marriage covenant before they become one flesh and bring children into the world. Tilly is correct that divorce and unmarried parents are how things are right now, but this is not God’s good design.

Throughout the story, Tilly longs to know her parents. The author describes her as having “cracks in her heart” because she has never known them. According to the biblical worldview, why do humans long to know their parents and to be known by them?
Discussion Guide - Read Galatians 4:4-7 and Romans 8:15-17. Discuss how the parental role is a picture of God as our Heavenly Father. We were ultimately designed to long for and find our fullness in God. The longing every child has for their parents was created to point us to God.

At the end of the story, we learn that Enoch Chalk was seeking to take over the underlibrary because he didn’t want to be doomed to the fate the author of his book wrote for him. As Christians, we know that God is writing the story of human history. However, how is God’s role in human history similar to or different from the role of a human author in his or her story?
Discussion Guide - Read Isaiah 45:7-9. Discuss how God is sovereign. Like the author of a book, God has control over the course of history. Read Deuteronomy 30:15-20. Discuss how, unlike the author of a book, God gives his people choice. They can choose to follow him or to rebel.

Bonus Question - If you have gone through Foundation Comparative Worldview Curriculum, say, “Toward the end of the book, Enoch Chalk questions who it is that should actually be able to create the rules.” If Tilly came from a Postmodern worldview, how would she have answered Mr. Chalk’s question?
Discussion Guide - Discuss how Tilly would have said that there is no such thing as true right and wrong, but that each community decides what is right and wrong for themselves.


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