Australian-Irish illustrator Oliver Jeffers has created over 20 picture books for children. Beloved in households around the world, the stories often distill big ideas into gorgeously crafted characters and scenarios.

His latest book, I’m Very Busy – A (Nearly Forgotten) Birthday Book centres around Bridget. She wants to spend her birthday with her friends but they’re all too busy. The story explores the concept of busyness and the power of friendship.

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I'm Very Busy spreads from children's illustrated book

(Image credit: Oliver Jeffers)What sparked the idea for I’m Very Busy?

It’s the modern curse of our time. As Lewis Carroll says, “the hurrier, I go, the behinder I get”. And with very short attention spans, definitely fuelled by a 24 hour news industry and social media use, I think that we are so distracted that there’s this notion of constantly keeping up with appearances, keeping up with the Joneses. We are busier than we’ve ever been, but we also simultaneously seem to accomplish less.

That’s been something I’ve been thinking about for a long time, especially as somebody who would consider myself an ambitious artist and then being a parent. These two things do not go hand in hand. That was always a concept that was floating up out of my work – how it is that we choose to spend our time.

When people say ‘I don’t have time’ to do something, I’ve often thought that’s technically not true. You do have time. In fact, time is the only thing that you do have, really. It’s how you prioritise that time. It’s how you choose to spend that time.

I'm Very Busy spreads from children's illustrated book

(Image credit: Oliver Jeffers)

If you don’t have time for something, what you’re really saying is, ‘I don’t prioritise this’. And when you rephrase that, it really makes you think. It’s like, ‘I don’t have time to go to the doctor’. It means,’ I’m not prioritising going to the doctor’. Is that really a wise use of your time? Or it’s like, ‘I don’t have time to play with the kids. I’m not prioritising playing with the kids’. It reframes how you think about things.

Fate of Fausto, and I tried to make that on a 200-year-old lithography press in Paris. We guessed it would take about three weeks to make all the artwork and it ended up taking something closer to four months working around the clock.

I’m very glad that I did that in the end, but with the new techniques, unless you’ve something that really lends itself to the concept of the book, I don’t think there’s any point in throwing a new experiment in for the sake of it. So I don’t intend to start playing with new techniques anytime soon, unless something presents itself that I was like, ‘This makes a lot of sense for this concept.’

I'm Very Busy spreads from children's illustrated book

(Image credit: Oliver Jeffers)Do you think that good children’s books should always contain a message?

No. In fact, I think potentially good children’s books often get caught up in trying to thinly veil a moral imparting. Good children’s books often do tend to contain a good message but that’s because they don’t go about trying to deceptively teach a lesson. They just happen to hit on an issue that humans are interested in just by way of being a good story.

One of the most popular of my children’s books is Stuck. And that doesn’t contain a lesson. What is that lesson? Throw increasingly larger objects at a problem until it is solved, or you forget about it? Not really a great lesson. So, no, I don’t think they have to teach a lesson, and I do think we went through a phase where people thought that they did, and that notion is probably responsible for a lot more bad books than it is good ones, unfortunately.

But I think you can get good moral values across if it’s done in an authentic way, rather than I’m going to disguise this preaching moral message that you should all know under the guise of this pretty story. I don’t think it works that well.

I’m Very Busy: A (Nearly Forgotten) Birthday Book is out now.