It took me several seconds to realize that The Gull Yettin is a book without text. No speech bubbles. No narration. Not a single letter. Over two hundred pages, all drawings. I thought to myself, Can a story without words really tell anything clearly? After reading it once, I realized: it’s not that it can’t tell things clearly. It’s that my eyes hadn’t yet learned to speak this visual language. Those images built with wild lines and thick color blocks felt like a dream that needs no translation. I closed the book. A bird lingered in my heart. A human-shaped seagull, standing in the shadows outside a soccer field, head tilted, watching a lonely boy.
One button bound two lonely souls together
The story starts at a soccer field. The boy stands on the sideline. The noise around him felt disconnected from him. In the distance, a human-shaped seagull. Not coming closer. Not leaving. Just watching him quietly. Before leaving, the boy pulls a button from his shirt and places it on the ground. The seagull walks over and picks up the button. Two lonely lives connected by a single button.

The pages that follow hit like a storm. A house on fire. An entire street burned red. The boy stands in the middle of the ruins. His face shows nothing. He gets sent to a foster home. Wakes up in the middle of the night staring at an unfamiliar ceiling. A small boat drifts on the sea. He sits at the bow, not knowing where he’s going. Every image looks like someone pressed it hard into the paper. The paint is thick enough to touch. The author, Joe Kessler, built this world with three main colors: yellow, green, red. Yellow represents both sunlight and fear; green, both grass and swamp; red, both warmth and blood. Those colors don’t judge good or bad. They just sit there honestly, like emotions themselves.
The seagull’s revenge and reconciliation
This seagull is not some gentle little animal from a fairy tale. It has its own anger. After the boy’s foster mother accidentally hurts the seagull, the seagull disappears. When it reappears, it brings a revenge that destroys everything. That scene made me recoil in my chair. Because that kind of hatred is too real. It’s not a villain. It’s just a living thing that has been hurt, fighting back the only way it knows how.

The relationship between the boy and the seagull is not owner and pet. It’s not friendship. It’s two broken gears meshing together. When they bite into each other, it hurts. It can draw blood. But only by staying locked together can their lives keep turning. There’s a scene in the book — a reunion under the stars. The boy and the seagull lie on the grass. Above them, a sky full of stars. No hug. No tears. They just lie there. I stared at that page for a long time. That was the quietest companionship I have ever seen.
Three lonely points form a triangle
This book has a hidden structural line — three peaks of loneliness: an orphaned boy, a lonely seagull, a lonely woman. At first, the line connects the boy and the seagull. That line gets broken by the woman’s misunderstanding. Then the line connects the woman and the boy. That line gets broken by the seagull’s revenge. In the end, the seagull and the woman reconcile. The seagull reconnects the line to the boy and brings the boy back to the woman. The triangle is complete.
Three lonely lives, at the three points of that triangle, find reconciliation and rebirth. Yettin finally turns into a tree, standing in an open field, branches reaching toward the sky. The boy watches it from a distance. Then he turns and keeps walking his own path. No tear-soaked goodbye. No looking back. Just a tree standing there. A person walking away. The wind blows between them, rustling the leaves.
I’m not sure what age this book is for. A child reading it will see a bird and a boy having an adventure. An adult reading it will see how loneliness grows into companionship, how wounds bloom into flowers. An elder reading it will see that Everything irretrievable, everything impossible to let go of—in the end, it all becomes a tree. It feels as though the book has said everything. Like that tree standing in the open field where Yettin the Seagull stands. Even without leaves, you can still see it there. It doesn’t need to bloom or bear fruit to prove it’s alive. It stands there. That is all the proof of being alive that it needs.