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  • Published: 4 October 2022
  • ISBN: 9780823450725
  • Imprint: Holiday House
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 32
  • RRP: $40.00

I Feel Safe



Thunder cracks. Lightning flashes. The lights go out. But Mommy, Daddy, Grandma and Grandpa help a young girl feel safe. What makes you feel safe?

The storm is very scary! Then Grandma lights candles, Grandpa plays his guitar, Mommy makes cocoa, Daddy brings out some biscuits . . . and hugs are shared by all.

But where are the cats, Frankie and JoJo? Have they run out of the house and into the storm?. The family searches high and low and in and out. When hope is gone, the cats emerge from their hiding place. All are safe.

The last sentence in the book asks, “What makes YOU feel safe?” inviting caregivers and children to a conversation about coping with fears.

David McPhail is a beloved author-illustrator of best-selling children's books and winner of a New York Times Best Illustrated Award. Pouring his heart and soul into the illustrations for this book, David McPhail has created a dozen ink-and-watercolor mini-masterpieces in jewel-like tones. The character in this story was inspired by David McPhail’s stepchild, whom he has always wanted to keep safe.

  • Published: 4 October 2022
  • ISBN: 9780823450725
  • Imprint: Holiday House
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 32
  • RRP: $40.00

About the author

David McPhail

David McPhail ONZM and QSM, whose biography The Years Before My Death was a bestseller, is one of New Zealand’s best-known comedy actors, writers and directors. For the past 30 years, he has written and appeared in a wide variety of New Zealand television programmes, including the award-winning satirical skit series A Week of It, McPhail and Gadsby and Issues, as well as Letters to Blanchy (later toured as a play), and the controversial politically incorrect school-room comedy Seven Periods with Mr Gormsby (lauded by The Sydney Morning Herald as ‘quick-witted’ and ‘darkly funny’). His hugely successful creative friendships with A.K. Grant, Bruce Ansley and Jon Gadsby have resulted in some of New Zealand’s finest comic writing. He has been named both Actor of the Year and Television Personality of the Year on two occasions. In 1995 McPhail was awarded a Queen’s Service Medal for service to the community, and in 2008 he was appointed an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to television and the theatre. McPhail was a foundation shareholder of TV3 and helped set up New Zealand’s first independent television network. He has worked extensively at The Court Theatre in Christchurch, both as an actor and a director, and for 10 years was a regular columnist for The Press in Christchurch. David is known as an articulate and witty speaker, debater and professional MC.

The Years Before My Death recounts not just his collaborative partnerships with the likes of A.K. Grant, Bruce Ansley and Jon Gadsby, but also his equally ‘productive’ encounters with former prime minister Robert Muldoon, the comic genius Dudley Moore, and the television networks of the day. McPhail is arguably best-known for his impersonation of Robert Muldoon, which, according to Steve Braunias in The New Zealand Listener, shrank ‘the most terrifying man in New Zealand to a goblin-sized joke’. Later he gave a more nuanced portrayal of Muldoon in his one-man play, Muldoon (2003). Among many others he has also impersonated Tina Turner, Roger Douglas (played straight in the TV mini-series Fallout), and Keith Holyoake.

McPhail has also partnered with Rawiri Paratene, Mark Wright, Rima Te Wiata, Alison Wall, Peter Rowley and Willy de Wit.

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