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Blog: the dust of everyday life (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, Chapter book, Corel Painter, Digital artwork, Clarion Books, Laura Freeman, BLACK & WHITE, Add a tag
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After taking a look at our selection of hot new releases and popular kids' books ... it's more than likely we're suckers for picture books about love, kindness, and compassion.
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JacketFlap tags: Feiwel and Friends, Walker Books, One Green Apple, Frances Lincoln, Clarion Books, Christy Hale, Daniel Pennac, Black Sheep, Ken Spillman, Weedflower, Sarah Ardizzone, Karen Gray Ruelle, Deborah Durland DeSaix, The Circle, First Come the Zebra, Lynne Barasch, Janetta Otter-Barry Books, Na’ima B. Robert, MWD article, Lee & Low (US), Rev. Lyndon Harris, the Forgiveness Garden, The Grand Mosque of Paris: A Story of How Muslims Rescued Jews During the Holocaust, Armour Publishing Singapore, children's books about reconciliation and trust, Books, Young Adult, Eye of the Wolf (L'oeil du loup), Manjari Chakravarti, Max Grafe, Picture Books, Articles, Non-Fiction, Cynthia Kadohata, Atheneum Books for Young Readers, Eve Bunting, Lauren Thompson, Holiday House, Ted Lewin, Add a tag
A few weeks ago, amidst the deepening refugee crisis from the war in Syria, many people and organisations around the world came together for the Continue reading ...
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JacketFlap tags: Shaun Tan, Ziba Came on a Boat, Eve Bunting, Karen Lynn Williams, Khadra Mohammed, The Arrival, Holiday House, Catherine Stock, Ted Lewin, Robert Ingpen, Liz Lofthouse, Michelle Lord, Shino Arihara, Mary Hoffman, Four Feet Two Sandals, One Green Apple, John Marsden, R. Gregory Christie, IBBY Congress, Susan Guevara, Tony Johnston, Tilbury House, Jude Daly, Frances Lincoln, Playing War, Clarion Books, Shen's Books, Linda Gerdner, Sarah Langford, A Song for Cambodia, Rukhsana Khan, Matt Ottley, Home and Away, Karin Littlewood, The Colour of Home, Lea Lyon, Jeremy Brooks, Let There be Peace: Prayers from Around the World, The Island, Cinco Puntos Press, Sarah Garland, Armin Greder, Doug Chayka, Annemarie Young, Anthony Robinson, June Allan, children's books about refugees, Ronald Himmler, Pegi Deitz Shea, children's books about peace, Stuart Loughridge, Allen & Unwin, Azzi In Between, Tamarind Books, MWD article, Lee & Low (US), Grandfather's Story Cloth / Yawg Daim Paj Ntaub Dab Neeg, Eerdman's Publishing, Mohammed’s Journey: A Refugee Diary, Lothian Books, children's books about war, Voice from Afar: Poems of Peace, The Roses in My Carpets, Ben Morley, Boyd's Mill Press, Brothers in Hope: The Story of the Lost Boys of Sudan, Carl Pearce, Chue and Nhia Thao Cha, Debra Reid Jenkins, Dia Cha, Dia's Story Cloth: The Hmong People's Journey to Freedom, Frances Park & Ginger Park, Gervalie's Journey: A Refugee Diary, Joyce Herold, Kathy Beckwith, Mali Under the Night Sky: A Lao Story of Home, Mary Williams, Meltem's Journey: A Refugee Diary, My Freedom Trip, My Name is Sangoel, The Silence Seeker, The Whispering Cloth, Viking (Australia), You Yang, Youmi, Poetry, Young Adult, Anita Riggio, Picture Books, Articles, Non-Fiction, Middle-Grade, Add a tag
This article was a presentation given at the 2012 IBBY Congress in London, first posted here and developed from a PaperTigers.org Personal View, “Caught up in Conflict: Refugee stories about and for young people“.
A bibliography with links to relevant websites is listed by title can be … Continue reading ...
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JacketFlap tags: Books, Picture Books, Eve Bunting, Ted Lewin, One Green Apple, Clarion Books, children's books about refugees, MWD Reviews, MWD book reviews, Add a tag
One Green Apple
written by Eve Bunting, illustrated by Ted Lewin
(Clarion Books, 2006)
One Green Apple tells the story of Farah, who has … Continue reading ...
Add a CommentBlog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Best Sellers, Best Kids Stories, Ages 0-3, Ages 4-8, Book Lists, Carl-Johan Forssén Ehrlin, Book List, Picture Books, Dr. Seuss, Chronicle Books, Oliver Jeffers, The New York Times, featured, Lauren Castillo, Random House Books for Young Readers, Tom Lichtenheld, Clarion Books, Daniel Salmieri, Philomel Books, Dial books, Sherri Duskey Rinker, Adam Rubin, Drew Daywalt, Best Selling Books For Kids, B.J. Novak, Add a tag
Autumn is a beautiful time for reading. Award-winning Nana in the City, by Lauren Castillo, is this month's best selling picture book from our affiliate store—it's a delightful selection for fall.
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JacketFlap tags: Charlotte Huang, Jack E. Levin, Vesa Lehtimaki, Harry Potter, Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Scholastic, James Dashner, featured, Sarah Beth Durst, DK Publishing, Loren Long, Jeff Kinney, Delacorte Press, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Amulet Books, Little Brown Books for Young Readers, Aladdin Books, Clarion Books, Philomel Books, Cressida Cowell, Lauren Kate, How to Train Your Dragon, Jodi Lynn Anderson, Marissa Meyer, Coralie Bickford-Smith, Teens: Young Adults, Lunar Chronicles, Jenn Bennett, Best Kids Stories, Feiwel & Friends, Hot New Releases, Best New Kids Books, Mark R. Levin, Add a tag
Hot New Releases & Popular Kids Stories It's important to keep up on the hot new releases and popular kids' books as we enter the gift giving season!
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JacketFlap tags: Holiday Gift Guide Kids Books, Ralph Manheim, E.T.A. Hoffmann, Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Christmas, Book Lists, Susan Cooper, The Nutcracker, Maurice Sendak, Sherri L. Smith, featured, Jaime Zollars, Margaret K. McElderry Books, Robert Ingpen, Charles Dickens, Clement C. Moore, Clarion Books, Kate Milford, Crown Books, Seasonal: Holiday Books, Sterling Children's Books, G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers, Best Kids Stories, Add a tag
Sherri L. Smith, author of The Toymaker's Apprentice, selected these five holiday book favorites.
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JacketFlap tags: Clarion Books, Kate Milford, Puffin Books, Herve Tullet, Marie Lu, Teens: Young Adults, Abby Hanlon, Best Kids Stories, Putnam Juvenile books, Holiday Gift Guide Kids Books, Book List, Ages 0-3, Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Chronicle Books, Gift Books, Jaime Zollars, Add a tag
When possible, give the gift of books for birthdays, baby showers, or any other celebration that requires a present—books are special and therefore worthy of special occasions.
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JacketFlap tags: HarperCollins, Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Chapter Books, Linda Sue Park, Chronicle Books, Best Sellers, Knopf Books for Young Readers, Middle Grade Books, Disney-Hyperion Books, Clarion Books, Dial books, Holly Goldberg Sloan, R.J. Palacio, Boaz Yakin, Best Kids Stories, Best Selling Books, Best Selling Books For Kids, Sheldon Lettich, Add a tag
This month, Connect the Thoughts, an innovative journal from Chronicle Books, is The Children's Book Review's best selling middle grade book.
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JacketFlap tags: Ages 0-3, Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Cece Bell, Gift Books, Atheneum Books for Young Readers, Disney-Hyperion Books, Clarion Books, Dial books, Teens: Young Adults, Best Books for Kids, Best Kids Stories, Adam Silvera, Best New Kids Books, Cassie Beasley, Christine Hayes, Jennifer Gray Olson, Jennifer Chambliss Bertman, New Kids Book, Soho Teen Books, Mo willems, William Joyce, featured, Roaring Brook Press, Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, Hot New Releases, Popular Kids Stories, Henry Holt and Co. books, Jessica Lawson, Add a tag
And we thought May was a tough month to select the best new kids books! June has so many awesome books to dive into this summer.
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JacketFlap tags: Old Elm Speaks: Tree Poems, Pancho Ernantes Ernantes, Pauline Stewart, poetry about trees, Rebecca Parfitt, Rowena Sommerville, The Kite Tree, Books, Poetry, Articles, Naomi Shihab Nye, Barefoot Books, verse novels, Margaret K. McElderry Books, Groundwood Books, Kristine O'Connell George, Christina Rossetti, Michael Rosen, Myra Cohn Livingston, Jorge Luján, poetry for children, Margarita Engle, The Surrender Tree, The Tree is Older than You Are, Mary Ann Hoberman, Clarion Books, Simon & Schuster, Square Fish, Manuel Monroy, Grace Nichols, Robbin Gourley, Tulika Books, Amy Ludwig VanDerwater, Julia Cairns, Nirupama Sekhar, Antonio Frasconi, Forest Has a Song, MWD article, poetry anthologies, MWD theme - Trees, 'Branching Across the World: Trees in Multicultural Children's Literature, children's books about trees, Avanti Mehta, Daybreak Nightfall, Grandad's Tree: Poems About Families, Jesús Carlos Soto Morfín, Jill Bennett, Joan Poulson, John Oliver Simon, Kate Kiesler, Lindsay Macrae, Mexican poetry, Monkey Puzzle and Other Poems, Add a tag
To give the Chinese proverb in its entirety, ‘Keep a green tree in your heart and perhaps a singing bird will come’ – and to extend the metaphor (or revert it … Continue reading ...
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JacketFlap tags: Roaring Brook Press, Picasso, Picture Books For Children, Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, Sharks, Sally Wern Comport, Rick Allen, Princeton Architectural Press, Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Picture Books, Book Lists, Non-Fiction, Joyce Sidman, Martin Luther King Jr., Gift Books, featured, Atheneum Books for Young Readers, Eerdmans Books for Young Readers, Katherine Applegate, Knopf Books for Young Readers, Gandhi, Mary GrandPré, Jen Bryant, Melissa Sweet, Alexander Calder, Clarion Books, Bethany Hegedus, Bret Witter, Angela Farris Watkins, Barb Rosenstock, Best Books for Kids, Katherine Roy, Best Kids Stories, HMH Books for Young Readers, Patricia Geis, Arun Gandhi, Evan Turk, Luis Carlos Montalván, David Macaulay Studio, Dan Dion, Add a tag
The best non-fiction picture books of 2014, as picked by the editors and contributors of The Children’s Book Review.
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JacketFlap tags: Caldecott Honor Books, Mariko Tamaki, Clarion Books, Jon Klassen, Dan Santat, Mac Barnett, Medal Winners, Teens: Young Adults, Barb Rosenstock, Best Kids Stories, Caldecott Medal Winners, Most Distinguished American Picture Book, ALA, Ages 4-8, Picture Books, Book Lists, Yuyi Morales, American Library Association, Candlewick Press, Gift Books, featured, Caldecott Award, Eerdmans Books for Young Readers, Roaring Brook Press, Award Winners, Lauren Castillo, Knopf Books for Young Readers, Mary GrandPré, Jen Bryant, Melissa Sweet, Little Brown Books for Young Readers, Add a tag
Randolph Caldecott Medal Winner The most distinguished American picture book for children, announced by the American Library Association.
Add a CommentBlog: A Chair, A Fireplace and A Tea Cozy (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: reviews, history, non fiction, Emily Arnold McCully, 2014, clarion books, YALSA nonfiction finalist, Add a tag
Ida M. Tarbell: The Woman Who Challenged Big Business--and Won! by Emily Arnold McCully. Clarion Books, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. 2014. Library copy.
It's About: Ida M. Tarbell, born in 1857, who became one of the first American journalist and also helped found investigative journalism. Her noteworthy articles included a biography of Abraham Lincoln, and an expose of John D. Rockefeller and his company, Standard Oil Trust.
The Good: I really enjoyed learning about Ida M. Tarbell, whose name seemed vaguely familiar from history class.
I was impressed with Ida's many accomplishments and the things she did -- starting with her love of the sciences, attending a co-educational college, her start in journalism, traveling to Paris, freelancing, and then joining the staff of McClure's Magazine, where she wrote her most memorable articles.
One of the things that struck me is how matter of fact it was, how "of course this is what Ida is going to do" it was. While Ida was a pioneer, her story is also a reminder that her life, while not typical of the time, was also just that -- her life. She, with other women, did go to college. She, as others did, created a career, lived away from her family, traveled to Paris, working, having her own home.
I confess: that part of Ida's life, the pre-McClure part, fascinated me the most. I wanted to know more about those things, and those people in her life.
Of course, then, there is Ida's actual journalism, a career she came to sort of sideways. She began loving science, thought she'd be a teacher, and found herself working as an editor at a magazine. It wasn't until her early thirties and her trip to Paris that her work as a journalist really began. So, you can see all the reasons I kept turning the pages -- here, a women in the nineteenth century, having multiple careers. Pursuing her dreams. Living her life on her terms.
One cannot make generalizations about people: for all of Ida's accomplishments, which resulted from drive and determination, she had what seems to be mixed feelings about women's suffrage and equality. McCully explores this area in detail, noting that Ida's being against women getting the vote is probably one of the reasons she is a bit forgotten. What struck me was how modern, actually, Ida's beliefs were: I could easily imagine her in the present, being someone explaining how she didn't need feminism and wasn't a feminist because look at what she accomplished, on her own, and if she did it anyone can so stop with the feminism already.
I would like to learn more about Ida, and her life -- always a good sign in a biography, being left wanting more! I wonder if the things I want to know more about are things that McCully didn't cover because of length (this is a long, detailed biography) or if it's because there aren't the source documentation to answer the questions. For example, I wanted to know more about Ida's unnamed roommates during her 20 but imagine that was left out because of space. I also was curious as to Ida's relationships with her family and those family dynamics. Ida loved her father dearly, and ended up being the main provider to her mother, sister, brother, and brother's family. And yet certain things here left me asking for more and wondering things like whether her father was as wonderful as she painted him, for example. Is that not explored more because of space? Or because there is very little surviving from that time that would fill in the gaps about Ida's family?
Being left with questions, wanting more -- excellent. Learning more about Ida M. Tarbell, and also about what it was like for a woman pursuing a career over a hundred years ago? Even better. I'm so happy that this is a finalist for the YALSA Excellence in Nonfiction Award! I read it because it was a finalist, and I'll be chatting it up because it's a finalist.
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© Elizabeth Burns of A Chair, A Fireplace & A Tea Cozy
Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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This month, Secrets of a Christmas Box, a fantasy novel where the Christmas Tree ornaments come to life once the family go to bed, is The Children's Book Review's best selling middle grade book.
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JacketFlap tags: HarperCollins, Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Chapter Books, Linda Sue Park, featured, Rick Riordan, Katherine Applegate, Best Sellers, Middle Grade Books, Random House Books for Young Readers, Disney-Hyperion Books, Clarion Books, Chris Grabenstein, R.J. Palacio, Best Kids Stories, Best Selling Books For Kids, Add a tag
This month we have some truly intelligent fiction for our middle grade readers that really are must-reads. The Children's Book Review's best selling middle grade book is a regular on the list: Star Wars: A Pop-Up Guide to the Galaxy, by Matthew Reinhart.
Add a CommentBlog: A Fuse #8 Production (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Reviews, picture books, Best Books, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Clarion Books, funny picture books, Josh Schneider, Best Books of 2014, Reviews 2014, 2014 picture books, 2014 reviews, Add a tag
Princess Sparkle-Heart Gets a Makeover
By Josh Schneider
Clarion (an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
$16.99
ISBN: 978-0-544-14228-2
Ages 3-7
On shelves now
Sometimes I’ll just sit back and think about how the advent of the internet has affected literary culture. I don’t mean book promotion or reviews or any of that. I’m talking about the very content of books themselves. On the one hand, it accounts for the rise in Steampunk (a desire for tactile, hands-on technology, gears and all). On the other, it has led to a rise in books where characters make things. So why, you may be asking yourself, am I saying all this when ostensibly I’m supposed to be reviewing a picture book with the title Princess Sparkle-Heart Gets a Makeover? Because, best beloved, Josh Schneider has created a picture book that provides solutions. If something terrible happens to something you love, do you sit on the floor and cry and bemoan your fate? NO! You go out and find the solution, even if it means getting your hands a little dirty. We’re seeing a nice uptick in books where kids make things and fix things on their own. Add in a jealous doggy and a twist ending that NO ONE will see coming and you have a book that could easily have been written in the past but contains a distinctly 21st century flavor through and through.
Amelia just couldn’t be happier. When she gets her new doll, Princess Sparkle-Heart, the two bond instantly. They do tea parties, royal weddings, share secrets, the works. Never mind that Amelia’s pet dog eyes their happiness with an envious glare. The minute the two are separated, it acts. One minute Princess Sparkle-Heart is reading a book to herself. The next, she’s a pile of well-chewed bits and pieces on the floor. At first Amelia is distraught, but when her mother proposes putting the doll back together Amelia provides direction and ideas. This is the all-new Princess Sparkle-Heart, ladies and gentlemen. One that is NOT going to be taken advantage of again.
I’ll be the first to admit to you that I like a little weird with my children’s literature. The only question is whether or not kids like the same kind of weird that I like. There’s no question that some of them do have a taste for the unusual, after all. It’s adult selectors that grow disturbed by some of this author/illustrator’s choices. In the case of Princess Sparkle-Heart (can I tell you how much I love that her last name is hyphenated?) I’ve already seen a schism between some adults and others. Some adults find this book freakin’ hilarious. They love the odd way in which Schneider chooses to empower his heroine. Others aren’t amused in the least. For my part, I found it a wonderful new girl/doll story. I was particularly fond of the spread where Amelia looks at a wall of fashion magazines and zeroes in on the sole solitary superhero comic found there instead. So if Schneider is telling readers something, he’s being subtle about it.
I’ve also been noticing a rather nice trend recently in books starring young girls. There’s a real movement in the country right now to give girls the impetus to make and create and build. Books like The Most Magnificent Thing by Ashley Spires where the heroine not only builds but deals repeatedly with disappointment are really quite fabulous. In Princess Sparkle-Heart Amelia’s unseen mother is the one doing the construction of a new princess, but it’s Amelia who provides the number of parts and the specifications. If the new princess is completely different from her prior incarnation, that’s thanks to Amelia’s contributions. Meanwhile the Frankenstein connection that some have noted (and that I entirely missed the first time around) is clearly intentional. How else to explain the two screws that appear in the “M” of the front cover’s “Makeover”? No doubt Princess Sparkle-Heart’s conversion will strike some as monstrous. For others, it’ll be like your average everyday superhero origin story. Nothing wrong with that!
I’ve been oddly amused by dog books this year. I am not a dog person. I can take ‘em or leave ‘em. But in 2014 we’ve seen some really spectacular canine picture books. Things like Shoe Dog by Megan McDonald, and I’m My Own Dog by David Ezra Stein, and now this. The dog in this particular book is awfully similar to the one in Bears by Ruth Krauss as re-illustrated by Maurice Sendak, with its jealousy of a beloved toy. Cleverly Schneider has positioned the dog’s growls to serve as a running commentary behind the action. A low-key “GRRRRRRRRRR” runs both on and off the page, bleeding into the folds, falling off the sides. Schneider’s humans never have pupils (and combined with her red hair this gives Amelia a distant L’il Orphan Annie connection) but the dogs and stuffed animals do. As a result, the dog ends up oddly sympathetic in spite of its naughty ways (and indeed there is a happy ending for all characters at the story’s close).
Occasionally folks will ask me for “Princess Book” recommendations. Admittedly I’m far more partial to subversive princess tales (The Paperbag Princess, The Princess and the Pig, etc.) than those that adhere to the norm. Keeping that in mind, this is definitely going into my princess book bag of tricks. With its twist ending, strong female character, and princess that looks like she could take down twenty monsters without a blink, I’m a fan. I wouldn’t necessarily hand it to the kid looking for fluff and fairies and oogly goo, but for children with a wry sense of humor (and they do exist) this book is going to pack a wallop. Funny and surprising and a great read through and through. You ain’t never seen a makeover quite like THIS before.
On shelves now.
Source: Galley sent from publisher for review.
Like This? Then Try:
- The Most Magnificent Thing by Ashley Spires
- Fanny by Holly Hobbie
- Dahlia by Barbara McClintock
- Bears by Ruth Krauss, illustrated by Maurice Sendak
Other Blog Reviews: Sal’s Fiction Addiction,
Professional Reviews: A star from Publishers Weekly, A star from Kirkus,
Misc: There is a TON of stuff related to the book on the publisher’s website. Everything from sewing patterns to a Q&A to early sketches to more more more!
Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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I've found that the best of these books spoke to my kids when they were pre-readers, but still continue to draw them back again and again, as they uncover more in the multilayered stories. So without further ado, here are the Fitzgerald family's Top 5 Wordless Books.
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JacketFlap tags: mysteries, Reviews, Best Books, middle grade mysteries, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Clarion Books, Kate Milford, Best Books of 2014, Reviews 2014, 2014 reviews, 2014 mysteries, 2015 Newbery contender, Add a tag
Greenglass House
By Kate Milford
Clarion Books (an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
$17.99
ISBN: 978-0-544-05270-3
Ages 9-12
On shelves August 26th
When I was a kid I had a real and abiding love of Agatha Christie. This would be around the time when I was ten or eleven. It wasn’t that I was rejecting the mysteries of the children’s book world. I just didn’t have a lot to choose from there. Aside from The Westing Game or supernatural ghostly mysteries sold as Apple paperbacks through the Scholastic Book Fair, my choices were few and far between. Kids today have it better, but not by much. Though the Edgar Awards for best mystery fiction do dedicate an award for young people’s literature, the number of honestly good mystery novels for the 9-12 set you encounter in a given year is minimal. When you find one that’s really extraordinary you want to hold onto it. And when it’s Kate Milford doing the writing, there’s nothing for it but to enjoy the ride. A raconteur’s delight with a story that’ll keep ‘em guessing, this is one title you won’t want to miss.
It was supposed to be winter vacation. Though Milo’s parents run an inn with a clientele that tends to include more than your average number of smugglers, he can always count on winter vacation to be bereft of guests. Yet in spite of the awful icy weather, a guest appears. Then another. Then two more. All told more than five guests appear with flimsy excuses for their arrival. Some seem to know one another. Others act suspiciously. And when thefts start to take place, Milo and his new friend Meddy decide to turn detective. Yet even as they unravel clues about their strange clientele there are always new ones to take their places. Someone is sabotaging the Greenglass House but it’s the kids who will unmask the culprit.
To my mind, Milford has a talent that few authors can boast; She breaks unspoken rules. Rules that have been dutifully followed by children’s authors for years on end. And in breaking them, she creates stronger books. Greenglass House is just the latest example. To my mind, three rules are broken here. Rule #1: Children’s books must mostly be about children. Adults are peripheral to the action. Rule #2: Time periods are not liquid. You cannot switch between them willy-nilly. Rule #3: Parents must be out of the picture. Kill ‘em off or kidnap them or make them negligent/evil but by all means get rid of them! To each of these, Milford thumbs her proverbial nose.
Let’s look at Rule #1 first. It is worth noting that with the exception of our two young heroes, the bulk of the story focuses on adults with adult problems. It has been said (by me, so take this with a grain of salt) that by and large the way most authors chose to write about adults for children is to turn them into small furry animals (Redwall, etc.). There is, however, another way. If you have a small innocuous child running hither and thither, gathering evidence and spying all the while, then you can talk about grown-ups for long periods of time and few child readers are the wiser. If I keep mentioning The Westing Game it’s because Ellen Raskin did very much what Milford is doing here, and ended up with a classic children’s book in the process. So there’s certainly a precedent.
On to Rule #2. One of the remarkable things about Kate Milford as a writer is that she can set a book in the present day (there is a mention of televisions in this book, so we can at least assume it’s relatively recent) and then go and fill it with archaic, wonderful, outdated technology. A kind of alternate contemporary steampunk, if there is such a thing. In an era of electronic doodads, child readers are going to really get a kick out of a book where mysterious rusted keys, old doorways, ancient lamps, stained green glass windows, and other old timey elements give the book a distinctive flavor.
Finally, Rule #3. This was the most remarkable of choices on Milford’s part, and I kept reading to book to find out how she’d get away with it. Milo’s parents are an active part of his life. They clearly care for him, periodically checking up on his throughout the story, but never interfering with his investigations. Since the book is entirely set in the Greenglass House, it has the feel of a stage play (which, by the way, it would adapt to BRILLIANTLY). That means you’re constantly running into mom and dad, but they don’t feel like they’re hovering. This is partly aided by the fact that they’re incredibly busy. So, in a way, Milford has discovered a way of removing parental involvement without removing parental care. The kids are free to explore and solve crimes and the adult gatekeepers reading this book are comforted by the family situation. A rarity if ever there was one.
But behind all the clues and ghost stories and thefts and lies what Greenglass House really is is the story of a hero’s journey. Milo starts out a soft-spoken kiddo with little faith in his own abilities. Donning the mantle of a kind of Dungeons & Dragons type character named Negret, he taps into a strength that he might otherwise not known he even had. There is a moment in the book when Milo starts acting with more confidence and actually thinks to himself, “And I didn’t even have to use Negret’s Irresistible Blandishment . . . I just did it.” Milo’s slow awakening to his own strengths and abilities is the heart of the novel. For all that people will discuss the mystery and the clues, it’s Milo that holds everything together.
Much of his personality is embedded in his identity as an adopted kid too. I love the mention of “orphan magic” that Milford makes at one point. It’s the idea that when something is sundered from its attachments it becomes more powerful in the process. At no point does Milford ever downplay the importance of the fact that Milo is adopted. It isn’t a casual fact that’s thrown in there and then forgotten. For Milo, the fact that he was adopted is part of who he is as a person. And coming to terms with that is part of his journey as well. Little wonder that he gathers such comfort from learning about orphan magic and its potential.
I’m looking at my notes about this book and I see I’ve written down little random facts that don’t really fit in with this review. Things like, “I did wonder if Milo’s name was a kind of unspoken homage to the Milo of The Phantom Tollbooth. And, “The book’s attitude towards smuggling is not all that different from, say, Danny, the Champion of the World’s attitude towards poaching.” And, “I love the vocabulary at work here. Raconteur. Puissance.” There is a lot a person can say about this book. I should note that there is a twist that a couple kids may see coming. It is, however, a fair twist and one that doesn’t cheat before you get to it. For the most part, Milford does a divine job at writing a darned good mystery without sacrificing character development and deeper truths. A great grand book for those kiddos who like reading books that make them feel smart. Fun fun fun fun fun.
On shelves August 26th.
Source: Galley sent from publisher for review.
Like This? Then Try:
- The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin
- The Mysterious Benedict Society by Trenton Lee Stewart
- Escape From Mr. Lemoncello’s Library by Chris Grabenstein
First Sentence: “There is a right way to do things and a wrong way, if you’re going to run a hotel in a smugglers’ town.”
Professional Reviews:
- A star from Kirkus
- Publishers Weekly
Interviews: Milford reveals all with The Enchanted Inkpot.
Misc:
- In lieu of an Author’s Note, Kate provides some background information on Milo and adoption that is worthy additional reading here.
- Cover artist Jaime Zollars discusses being selected to illustrate the book jacket here.
- Read an excerpt of the first chapter at The Book Smugglers.
- Discover how the book came from a writing prompt here.
Blog: Kid Lit Reviews (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: relationships, Middle Grade, Favorites, fairies, ego, children's book reviews, wishes, middle grade novel, imps, Clarion Books, hexes, 5stars, Mary G. Thompson, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, Add a tag
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by Mary G. Thompson
Clarion Books 8/5/2014
978-0-547-85903-3
Age 8 to 12 320 pages
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“You could be gorgeous, brilliant, a star athlete, or great singer, or you could put a hex on your worst enemy. And all you have to do is raise a flock of two-inch-tall fairies. Easy, right? Wrong. Ali learns this the hard way when her flock-starter fairies get to work. Raising them means feeding them, and what they eat is hair. Lots and lots of human hair. Where to get the hair is Ali’s first challenge. What about the beauty salon? Easy, right? Before long, Ali’s friends, classmates, teachers, sister, and parents are entangled with the evil fairies, who have their own grandiose and sinister agenda. It’s up to Ali to overcome these magical troublemakers and set things right.”
Opening
“AGREEMENT 1. Alison E. B. Butler in exchange for one wish, hereby agree: . . .”
The Story
Alison is raising a flock of evil fairies in exchange for one wish. She wants to be smarter than her sister, who get s straight A’s and her parent’s attention. She has two problems right away. Michael gave her the two flock-starters and now he insists on checking up on her, constantly. It wouldn’t be so bad if he weren’t the second worst jerk in town. His brother is number one and dating Ali’s sister Hannah—the one who can do no wrong. Second problem, the baby fairies. All the babies want is to eat and they eat human hair, lots if it. Where is Ali going to get all that hair? She can’t use her own, and keeps her hair in a high bun to ensure the fairies don’t get to her hair. The boys shave their head.
Ali spots the beauty salon across from the middle school. They throw hair away every day. Ali tries to grab some of the discarded hair, but Mrs. Hopper, who has cut the Butler family’s hair since forever, catches her. Ali learns that Mrs. Hopper is not who she seems to be and wants to rescue Mrs. Hopper—the real Mrs. Hopper. Hopper is not the only one held captive. Molly and Tyler, who broke the rules while raising their flocks, are now suffering the penalty, and Mrs. Hopper—the fake one—is now holding them captive. Will Ali be able to free all three? Can she be able to get anyone else to help? Most importantly, will Ali raise her full flock and get her wish?
Review
I love Evil Fairies Love Hair. It has some normal teenage angst, a normal family, middle school casts, two flockstarters who may or may not help, and a good dash of magic. The good kids are not always as good as they seem and the bad kids are not as bad as everyone, including parents, believe. Then there are the little evil fairies, who may not be fairies at all. Evil Fairies Love Hair could be a confusing story, but events happen in good time and everything flows nicely from one plot point to the next. In fact, I had read half the book before I thought to check the time. I didn’t want to put the book down.
From the title, Evil Fairies Love Hair, I had no idea what to expect. The fairy on the cover is odd looking with large, bulging eyes that fill up half her face and a baldhead. She looks demanding and she and her fellow fairies are a demanding bunch. Their leader put the fairies in this position and was now trying to get them to where she wanted to be in the first place. Problem is, she easily makes mistakes, mainly due to her enormous ego. I love the humor and the middle school principal who never has a clue what his students are doing. He just wants them back to class. All the adults are clueless.
Middle grade kids will love this story. It will have them thinking about what they would wish for, if they had the opportunity. Kids will also wonder what getting their wish would cause to those around them. Would it be worth it to have everything you want? This is the author’s sophomore novel. (Escape from the Pipe Men! is her debut and will be reviewed here soon.) The writing is excellent. The story pulls you in and keeps you turning the pages. Kids looking for a magical tale with a few twists and turns will want to read Evil Fairies Love Hair. You may think you know what a fairy is and what a fairy does, but do you really? To find out, you need to read Evil Fairies Love Hair. Be careful what you wish for—you might just get it!.
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EVIL FAIRIES LOVE HAIR. Text copyright © 2014 by Mary G. Thompson. Illustrations copyright © 2014 by Blake Henry. Reproduced by permission of the publisher, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, Boston MA.
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Learn about Evil Fairies Love Hair HERE.
Buy Evil Fairies Love Hair at Amazon—B&N—Clarion Books—your local bookstore.
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Meet author Mary G. Thompson at her website: http://www.marygthompson.com/
Find more intriguing books at the Clarion Books website: http://www.hmhco.com/
Clarion Books is an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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Also by Mary G Thompson
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NEW from Clarion Books
Filed under: 5stars, Favorites, Middle Grade Tagged: children's book reviews, Clarion Books, ego, fairies, hexes, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, imps, Mary G. Thompson, middle grade novel, relationships, wishes Add a Comment
Blog: A Fuse #8 Production (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Josh Schneider, Best Books of 2013, Reviews 2013, 2013 early chapter books, funny early chapter books, Reviews, funny books, Best Books, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Clarion Books, early chapter books, Add a tag
The Meanest Birthday Girl
By Josh Schneider
Clarion Books (an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
$14.99
ISBN: 978-0-547-83814-4
Ages 6-9
On shelves now.
Life is easier when you can categorize it. When you can slot it in a distinct category and reduce everything to black and white terms. Gray is problematic and messy, after all. This type of thinking certainly applies to how people learn how to read. If you’re a library you separate your written fiction into five distinct locations: Baby & Board Books, Picture Books, Easy Readers, Early Chapter Books, and Middle Grade Fiction. Easy peasy. Couldn’t be simpler. And it would be an absolutely perfect system if, in fact, that was how humans actually learned how to read. Wouldn’t it be great if you could make mental leaps in difficulty from one book to another with sublime ease? Yet the fact of the matter is that for all that “leveling” a collection or trying to systematically give each book a Lexile reading level makes life easier for the folks who don’t want to bother to read the books themselves, it’s not so hotso for the kiddos. Not everything written in this world can be easily summarized. For this very reason I like books that don’t slot well. That are neither fish nor fowl. And I particularly like extraordinary books that fall into this category. Behold, then, the magnificent The Meanest Birthday Girl. Simple, straightforward, and smart as all get out, it’s too long for an easy book, too short for an early chapter book, and entirely the wrong size for a picture book. In other words, perfect.
As Dana sees it, birthdays are great for one particular reason. “It was Dana’s birthday and she could do whatever she liked.” Fortunately we’re dealing with a young kid here, so Dana’s form of Bacchanalian abandon pretty much just boils down to eating waffles for breakfast and dinner, showing off her birthday dress, and torturing fellow student Anthony. So it’s with not a little surprise that Dana finds at the end of the day that Anthony has shown up on her stoop with the world’s greatest birthday present. There, in the gleam of the house lights, stands a white elephant with pink toenails and a pink bow. Dana is elated and thinks that this is the best gift a gal could receive. It isn’t until she spends a little time with her white elephant gift that she begins to understand not just what a jerk she’s been, but how to spread the elephant “love” to those who need it the most.
I’ll confess to you right here and now that sometimes when I’m reviewing a book I find it helpful to look at the professional reviews so that I can nail down exactly WHY it is I like such n’ such a book. I mean, I liked the art and the story and the characters here, sure. But what I really liked was what the book was trying to say. Small difficulty: I’m not entirely certain what that was. Is this a book about the selflessness of parenthood or is the elephant a metaphor of unchecked desires? So I turned to the professionals. PW said the book “both makes amends and pays it forward”. SLJ eschewed any complex interpretations just saying that this was “more a story about a girl and her pet than it is about birthday shenanigans”. The Horn Book Guide (the book didn’t even rate a proper Horn Book review) found the message confusing while Kirkus gave the book a star and saw the elephant as simply a delivery system for a lesson about kindness. None of these really do the plot justice, though. I sympathize with Horn Book Guide’s confusion, but I disagree that the message doesn’t make any sense. It just requires the reader to dig a little deeper than your average Goosebumps novel.
Here’s how I figure it. Dana’s mean. She’s given an elephant (I love the idea that Anthony, the victim, may have previously been himself a pretty nasty customer to have had the elephant in the first place). The elephant demands constant attention, but subtly. It could just be Dana’s projections of what the elephant wants that undo her. That means she’s capable of empathy, which in turn leads to her feeling bad for what she did to Anthony. And then much of why this book works as well as it does has to do with the fact that the elephant isn’t, itself, a bully. If it were then the message of the book would be pounded into your skull like a hammer on a nail. Far better then that this particular elephant is just quietly insistent. It isn’t incapable of emotion, mind you. I was particularly pleased with the look of intense concentration on its face as it attempts to ride Dana’s rapidly crumpling bicycle. The slickest elephant moment in the book visually is when its trunk makes a sly play for Dana’s sandwich when she falls asleep under a tree, but the last image as the elephant stands in front of its new owner is of equal note. There you’ll see its trunk making the gentlest of movements towards the girl’s slice of birthday cake. It doesn’t take a Nostradamus to know that that’s the last the girl will ever see of her cake from here on in.
It was the PW review that probably did the best job of honing in on what makes this book special. Said they, the author “serves justice, [and] subtly (and quite cleverly) lets readers see another side to Dana …” That’s not something that occurred to me on an early reading but it’s entirely true. You meet Dana, her head resembling nothing so much in shape and size as those birthday balloons on the cover, and she does unlikable thing after unlikable thing. Then she gives up everything she has, from sandwiches to her bike, for a pachyderm. Kids may not make an immediate leap in logic between what Dana does and what they themselves sometimes have to do (willingly or unwillingly) for their little siblings, but it’s there. Schneider’s best move, however, is to show Dana being teased by a fellow classmate. Nothing cranks up the sympathy vote quite like someone suffering at the hands of another. Hence, by the time Dana formally apologizes to Anthony we’re completely Team Dana.
The art is all done in a simple execution of pen, ink, colored pencil, and watercolor. All of Schneider’s kids look like escapees from “L’il Orphan Annie” comic strips. They sport the same pupil-less eyes. Normally eyes without pupils are downright scary in some fashion, but Schneider shrinks them down so that they’re little more than incredibly expressive Os. Eyebrows go a long way towards conveying emotion anyway (the shot of Anthony raising one very cross eyebrow as Dana systematically nabs his cupcake is fantastic). Because Schneider’s books all have a tendency to look the same (Tales for Very Picky Eaters looks like The Meanest Birthday Girl looks like Princess Sparkle-Heart Gets a Makeover, etc.) there’s a temptation to discount him. Resist that urge. His is a star that is rising with rocket-like rapidity. I see great things for this guy. Great things.
The age level for this will cause no end of sorrow amongst the cataloging masses. I don’t care. The same could have been said for Sadie and Ratz (another preternaturally smart early early chapter book with a psychological base worth remembering) and a host of other books out there. What it all boils down to is the fact that The Meanest Birthday Girl is one of the rare books that makes for really intelligent fare. Odd? Certainly. But it’s willing to go places and do things that most books for kids in the 6-9 age range don’t dare. Not everyone will get what it’s trying to do. And not everyone deserves to. One of the best of 2013, bar none.
On shelves now.
Source: Final copy sent from publisher for review.
Like This? Then Try:
- Sadie and Ratz by Sonya Hartnett
- The Bad Birthday Idea by Madeline Valentine
- Big Red Lollipop by Rukhsana Khan
Other Blog Reviews:
Professional Reviews:
- A star from Publishers Weekly
- A star from Kirkus
- Booklist
- The Montreal Gazette
- The New York Times
Blog: Here in the Bonny Glen (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: rillabooks, Amy Ludwig VanDerwater, Forest Has a Song, Books, Poetry, picture books, Nature Study, Wonderboy, Picture Book Spotlight, Rilla, Clarion Books, Robbin Gourley, Add a tag
Forest Has a Song by Amy Ludwig VanDerwater, illustrated by Robbin Gourley.
Dear Amy,
My name is Rilla. I am 6. Mommy read Forest Has a Song to me. I think that It Is really pretty poetry and i also think that deer are pretty too. I really love nature. And deer are one of my favorite animals and it said a lot about deer. In the picture of the fiddlehead ferns, I really like the pattern of the colors. And the fossil looks so realistic. When I grow up i want to be an illustrator like Robbin Gourley. And also, i love the Spider poem and the Dusk poem. I love the never-tangling dangling spinner part. And I love baby animals. They’re so cute and fluffy when they’re birds at least.
One of my favorites is “Farewell.” How it says “I am Forest.”
Love,
Rilla
(Doggone spellcheck. She made me correct all her invented spellings—the red dots under her words tipped her off. Then again, “rhille priddy powatre” might have been hard for you to parse. Also, of course, recognizing that a word just looks wrong is a big step toward learning to spell.)
As for the book, I wholeheartedly agree with Rilla’s review. What a gorgeous, gorgeous volume. The poems sometimes wistful, sometimes whimsical, always lyrical. Beautiful for reading aloud, full of delicious internal rhyme and alliteration. And infectious: I predict a lot of original nature poetry in our future. This collection begs you to take a fresh look at the world around you and see the magic of the curled fern frond, the mushroom spore. Of course I’ve been a fan of Amy Ludwig VanDerwater’s work for years.
I can’t imagine a more perfect pairing for Amy’s poems than Robbin Gourley’s art. Lush watercolors, rich and soft. I kept coming across pages I’d like prints of. Actually, this is exactly the kind of book where you want a second copy for cutting up and framing. (If you can bear to. I always think I’d like to do that, but the one time I actually bought a spare copy for this purpose—Miss Rumphius—I couldn’t, in the end, bring myself to dismantle it.)
Beanie’s favorite poem was “Forest News”—
I stop to read
the Forest News
in mud or fallen snow.
Articles are printed
by critters on the go…
—which she loved for its intriguing animal-tracks descriptions, its sense of fun, and its kinship with her favorite Robert Frost poem, “A Patch of Old Snow.” (“It is speckled with grime as if / Small print overspread it, / The news of a day I’ve forgotten — / If I ever read it,” writes Frost, perusing a somewhat more somber edition of the woodsy chronicle.)
Wonderboy’s favorite was the puffball poem, and he later wrote (in his customary stream-of-consciousness style) this string of impressions the book made on him: “dead branch warning and woodpecker too dusk burrow in a burrow chickadee sit on my hand and come fly here”…
Truly beautiful work, Amy and Robbin.
Add a CommentBlog: A Fuse #8 Production (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: nonfiction picture books, Best Books, picture book biographies, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Clarion Books, multicultural picture books, Gary Golio, Rudy Gutierrez, Best Books of 2012, 2012 picture book biographies, African-American biographies, African-American picture book biographies, 2012 nonfiction picture books, Reviews, Add a tag
Spirit Seeker: John Coltrane’s Musical Journey
By Gary Golio
Illustrated by Rudy Gutierrez
Clarion Books (an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
$17.99
ISBN: 978-0-547-23994-1
Ages 6 and up
On shelves now
Is there any complicated hero with a past so full of darkness that their life cannot be recounted to children? This is the conundrum of any author who takes it upon his or herself to tell the stories of people who didn’t grow up happy, live lightly, and die laughing in their beds. The most interesting stories are sometimes the ones about folks who look into the eye of the devil and walk away the wiser. Trouble is, it can be hard to figure out whether or not theirs is a story kids need to know. They might love the life of Charlie Chaplin, but do you bring up his penchant for the very young ladies? Bob Marley did great things in his life . . . and consumed great amounts of drugs. Do you talk to kids about him? In the end, it all comes down to the skill of the biographer. The person who sits down and turns a great man or woman into a 32-48 page subject, appropriate for kids too young to watch PG-13 films on their own. To do it adequately is admirable. To do it brilliantly, as it’s done in Spirit Seeker: John Coltrane’s Musical Journey is worthy of higher praise.
He led as perfect a childhood as any African-American kid in the late 1930s could hope for. A loving family, two grandfather preachers, a great musician for a dad, the works. But all that came before the deaths. First his grandfather, then his father, then his grandmother too. Things grew dark for John, but an opportunity to learn the saxophone for free arose. It became John’s new religion, and the void inside him was easily filled by drugs and alcohol. He was brilliant at the instrument but was his own worst enemy when his addictions held sway. Golio tells the tale of how one young man bucked his fate and went on to become a leader in more ways than one. An Afterward, Author’s Note, Artist’s Note, and Sources and Resources appear at the end.
In any picture book biography (and this applies to bio pics on the silver screen too) the author needs to determine whether or not they’re going to try to cover the wide swath of their subject’s life, or if they’re going to select a single incident or turning point in that life and use that as the basis of their interpretation. Golio almost has it both ways. He’s certainly more in the wide swath camp, his book extending from John the child to John the successful and happy (relatively) adult. But within that storyline Golio takes care to build on certain images and themes. Reading through it you come to understand that he is showing how a happy child can become a brilliant but cursed young man, and then can escape his own personal demons, inspiring others even as he inspires himself. Under Golio’s hand Coltrane’s early exposure to religion reverberates every time he seeks out more spiritual knowledge, regardless of the sect. He loses so many people he loves (to say nothing of financial stability) then grows up to become the perfect melding of both his grandfather and his father.
Just as Golio builds on repeating images and themes in his text, so too does artist Rudy Gutierrez make a go of it in his art. The author/artist pairing on picture book is so often a case of an author writing a story, handing it over to their editor, that editor assigning it to an illustrator, and the illustrator working on the piece without any interaction with its original creator. It seems like a kind of crazy way to make great picture books, and many times the art and the text won’t meld as beautifully as they could. Then you’ll see a book like Spirit Seeker and though I know that “Gary Golio” is not a pseudonym for “Rudy Gutierrez” (or vice-versa) it sure feels like the two slaved together over each double-paged spread. I suppose the bulk of that credit lies with Gutierrez, all fairness to Golio’s text admitted. Gutierrez explains in his Artist’s Note at the end of the book that Coltrane was such an “artistic angel” to him that he fasted for two weeks so as to best focus, meditate, pray and paint this book. The result is a product that looks as though someone cared and cared deeply about the subject matter.
Mind you, the book will do kids and adults little good unless they like Gutierrez’s style. I happen to find it remarkable. He strikes the perfect balance between the literal and allegorical representation of certain aspects of Coltrane’s life. Some artists fall too far on one side or the other of that equation. Gutierrez isn’t afraid to attempt both at once. You’ve the energy of his lines trying to replicate the energy of the music, John’s grandfather’s preaching, his spiritual journey, etc. There are moments when you can actually sit a kid down and ask them something like, “What do you think it means when that single curving line moves from John’s father’s violin to his son’s heart?” At the same time, you know that Gutierrez is doing a stand up and cheer job of replicating the faces of the real people in this book time and time again. The melding of the two, sad to say, does turn a certain type of reader off. Fortunately I think that a close rereading can allay most fears.
In my own case, it took several rereadings before I began to pick up on Gutierrez’s repeated tropes. Golio begins the book with a description of John sitting in his grandfather’s church, his mother at the organ, the words of the sermon making a deep and lasting impression. That passage is recalled near the end of the book when John does his own form of “preaching” with his horn. As the text says, he was, “a holy man, shouting out his love of man to the whole human race.” You could be forgiven for not at first noticing that the image of John’s grandfather at the start of the book, hunched over a pulpit, the curve of his body lending itself to the curve of his words, is recalled in the very similar image of John’s and his saxophone, the curve of HIS body lending itself to the curve of his saxaphone’s music near the book’s end. Notice that and you start jumping back to see what else might have passed you by. The image of the dove (my favorite of these being when John meets Naima and two doves’ tails swirl to almost become a white rose). There’s so much to see in each page that you could reread this book twenty different times and make twenty different discoveries in the art alone.
I’ve mentioned earlier that there are some folks that don’t care for Gutierrez’s style. Nothing to be done about that. It’s the folks that object to doing an honest bio of Coltrane in the first place that give me the willies. I have honestly heard folks object to this story because it discusses John’s drug use. And it does. No question. You see the days when his deep sadness caused him to start drinking early on. You see his experiments with drugs and the idea some musicians harbored that it would make them better. But by the same token it would be a pretty lackadaisical reader to fail to notice that drugs and alcohol are the clear villains of the piece. Gutierrez does amazing things with these light and dark aspects of John’s personality. On the one hand he might be looking at the symbols of countless world religions. Then on the facing page is an opposite silhouette of John, the borders little more than the frightening red crayon scratchings of a lost soul. Read the book and you discover what he did to free himself from his trap. Golio even goes so far as to include a lengthy and in-depth “Author’s Note: Musicians and Drug Use” to clarify any points that might confuse a young reader. Let’s just say, all the bases are covered here. These two guys know what they are doing.
If there is any aspect of the design of the book that makes me grind my teeth to a fine powder it’s the typeface of the text. I’m not a typeface nerd. Comic Sans does not strike a chord of loathing in my heart as it does with others. That said, I do harbor a very strong dislike of this horrendous LA Headlights BTN they chose to set this story in. It fails utterly to complement the writing or the tone or the art in any way, shape, or form and makes the reading process distinctly unpleasant. They say that in some cultures artists will include a single flaw in a work because otherwise that piece would be perfect and only God is true perfection. With that in mind, I’ll consider this the single flaw that keeps Spirit Seeker from attaining a higher calling.
The reason Coltrane works as well as he does as a subject is that his is a story of redemption. Not just the redemption of a life freed from the power of drugs and alcohol, but a spiritual redemption and reawakening as well. It would pair beautifully with books like Malcolm X: A Fire Burning Brightly by Walter Dean Myers which perfectly complement this idea. It is the only real picture book bio of Coltrane worth considering, and a kind of living work of art as well. Melding great text with imagery that goes above and beyond the call of duty, this is one biography that truly does its subject justice. Complex in all the right ways.
On shelves now.
Source: Copy sent from publisher for review.
Like This? Then Try:
- Duke Ellington: The Piano Prince and His Orchestra by Andrea Davis Pinkney
- I and I, Bob Marley by Tony Medina
Interviews:
Other Blog Reviews:
Professional Reviews:
- A star from Kirkus
- Horn Book
- The Washington Informer
- The New York Times
- The Skanner
- Oregon Music News
Other Reviews:
Blog: Art, Words, Life (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: books with maps, clarion books, The Vine Basket, Josanne LaValley, Add a tag
This is a map I did recently for a book called The Vine Basket, by Josanne La Valley, coming out next spring. I love books with maps for so many reasons. (Not just because I get to create them!) One is that they anchor your imagination in the world of the story...
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Betsy, I adore this book, and you’ve highlighted my favorite page – so many details when the dog tears into the doll, and you can go looking for the her eye flying into the stratosphere. I love the consistency in the character of Amelia, too. She doesn’t look like a “girly girl” in her overalls and bunched up socks and so it’s totally refreshing and surprising that she loves her sparkly doll and it makes complete sense that she would design the particular playmate she does when the moment calls for it.