"Many think children's books are about inspiring stories but there's a lot more to it. There are books which deal with sensitive issues like death, sexuality, loneliness coupled with humour," Tallec told PTI in an interview.
"To illustrate such themes for children's books is very challenging because these concepts are difficult to explain. As an illustrator and writer, I have to be careful about what to say and how to say it to kids because they can be influenced easily," he said.
The story written by Charlotte Moundlic is about a little boy who wakes up to the news of his mother's death is overwhelmed with grief, anger and desperation to keep the memories of his mother alive.
Tallec, who has so far illustrated more than seventy children's books, says the most important aspect of illustration is to create a synergistic relationship between the text and its pictorial depiction.
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"The one thing I always ensure while illustrating is to identify and create a unique relationship between text and illustration for each book. The aim is to make it fathomable for children but every illustration has to be new and different. All I do is try and find a graphic sense for the text," he says.
"Illustrating children's books was never on my mind. I studied graphic design, worked for few years in advertising but soon I went door-to-door to meet publishers, showed them my work. It was when a publisher asked me to illustrate children's books. And I said yes! Projects for children's books just kept pouring in since then," he says.