A good reporter follows a solid lead and always protects their source. A good dog, by contrast, follows loyally but will always break away to protect their pack. So when that dog is a giant, intimidating Newfoundland breed afraid of everything from dark stairwells to paper bags, a good reporter will wonder why. When that reporter is someone like Thom Barker it鈥檚 not just enough to find the answers, but follow the peculiar story to the end 鈥 in this case to the writing of his debut children鈥檚 book exploring the theme of unfounded fears and critical-thinking.
Now in its second release, Lady MacBeth afraid of the stairs is based on Barker鈥檚 real life dog and her odd-ball journey of conquering this fear when one day she is given a small but significant reason to doubt her own thinking.
鈥淚 really hope more than anything children are entertained by it,鈥 Barker says. 鈥淥f course, confronting fears is a standard children鈥檚 book theme, so if it is entertaining, perhaps in a small way it will help children develop the skepticism they need to become critically-thinking adults.
Regular readers may remember Barker from his days about 13 years ago at the Interior News in Smithers. His stories were regularly shared with Black Press newspapers across B.C. He was in the Houston RCMP detachment less than an hour after the fatal, in-custody shooting of Ian Bush, and subsequently won a national award of excellence for his reporting on the inquiry. A Smithers crime series, on what was then B.C.鈥檚 鈥渃rime capital鈥, won him a dozen more accolades from journalism institutions in both Canada and the United States. In other words, he鈥檚 not known for fluff pieces. This foray into children鈥檚 books is a surprising turn for Barker, now a grandfather of two, until the adult readers see the similarities of Lady MacBeth鈥檚 fears, and the culture of fear underlying many of today鈥檚 news headlines.
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鈥淐ritical thinking is important for everybody,鈥 Barker says. 鈥淲ith all of the misinformation and disinformation going around on the Internet, particularly social media, you have to be able to discern what鈥檚 real and what鈥檚 not. Be able to question whatever is put before you, including your own gut instincts and fears.鈥
To be fair, Lady MacBeth is not afraid of all stairs, just these stairs in the Labrador home Barker shares with his wife Lorraine (whom he met in Smithers). For safety concerns they had blocked off the staircase when Lady was a pup, and Barker suspects her curiosity of what lurked beyond the barricade mutated into fear as she matured. Why she鈥檚 afraid of everything else is a mystery (a tennis racket, a bicycle, a tin can) but a good motivator for Barker to document Lady鈥檚 adventures in the world of fiction.
Thom Barker |
To illustrate this with humour and a light step, Barker turned to long-time friend Dave Rheaume, with whom he shared a passion as a child for co-creating comic books and homemade films. Rheaume brings what Barker calls a 鈥渉istorical-retro feel鈥 to the book. An emerging theme with reader reviews indicate children find the paintings whimsical while parents and grandparents find them nostalgic.
鈥淲hat I loved about the book is the idea that you have this large, powerful being that still has these phobias,鈥 Rheaume says. 鈥淭o see that such a a strong powerful beast, that鈥檚 basically the same size as a human, can still have the same sort of hangups and phobias and fears that all of us have makes her very relatable.鈥
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Provided the second release of the self-published book goes well, Barker and Rheaume are already planning a series they鈥檒l pitch to traditional publishers next year. The series will begin with titles like Lady MacBeth takes a bath, Lady MacBeth finds a dinosaur bone and Lady MacBeth goes to the big city.
Lady MacBeth afraid of the stairs is available on
quinn@terracestandard.com
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