Wild, Margaret. Woolvs in the Sittee.
Illustrated by Anne Spudvilas.
Front Street. 2006.
ISBN: 9731590785003
$17.99. Hardcover. 40 pages.
Readers Annotation
Hiding in a basement from the wolves he see everywhere, Ben longs for the blue skies of the past. Is he being hunted?
Plot Summary
In a post apocalyptic world Ben hides form the woolvs (wolves) that wander the streets. Ben, a young teen, demands the attention of the reader. The streets he describes are empty except for occasional bicycle. Traffic long gone from the roads. He once had friends and a family and now they are all gone. Each spread is detailed with Ben’s nearly illiterate script. He writes that the woolvs are “hatefuls,” and they “spare no won.” His neighbor Mrs. Radinski gives the young man spare water and food as he hides, and she even leaves the safety of the building to retrieve Ben when he is fooled by blue paint on a wall outside his windows into thinking the sky is blue again. Yet she doesn’t believe him when he tells her about the wolves. Instead she tells him that he should go back to school and take up a hobby. When Mrs. Radinski disappears from the building, Ben takes clothing, food and water and sets out to take back the city from the woolvs. On the final page he entreats us to join him.
Critical Evaluation
Spudvilas illustrations for this work are created using watercolor, charcoal and pencil. The color choices are dynamic and produce a feeling of dread through the dark imagery and shadow figures. Spudvilas expertly generates visual imagery usually seen in animated films. For example, for one spread she use greens, reds and veins of black, with small handprints on one page and the text in white on the next. The handprints overlaying the red watercolor almost look like heat images, not prints. While the red paint looks a little like dried blood. In another image the once bright sun suggested by the protagonist Ben, is now darken and filled with soot or ash. The sun barely peeks through the cloud cover. On the walls of Ben’s hideout are primitive drawings of wolves and Ben’s words that “no won is spared.” The book generates a sense of terror of the unknown as we read Ben’s words as effectively as any Stephen King novel. Do the wolves really exist, or is Ben delusional? These are questions never answered in the text. Instead it is left to the reader to determine if the protagonist is truthful. This is a very effective (albeit slim) horror story that reluctant older readers (15-18) should enjoy.
Information about the author
Margaret Wild (1948-) is a prolific children’s author from Australia. Most of her books are for children ages 4-8. Although she does not appear to have a personal web address you can find some information about her here.
Information about the artist
Spudvilas website is a virtual gallery of her work. You can find it at this address: http://www.annespudvilas.com/default.asp
Genre
Fiction, horror
Curriculum ties
None
Challenge Issues
None
Challenge defense ideas
There are no apparent challenge issues associated with this book. In the case that a challenge comes up, there are some things that you can do to start. You could read the book and become familiar with the content. Refer to the library collection development policy, and get reviews from reputable sources and teens that have read the book. You can find out more about this book on Amazon.com at http://www.amazon.com/Woolvs-Sitee-Margaret-Wild/dp/1590785002/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1260134468&sr=8-1
Booktalking Ideas
1. Discuss the setting for the story
2. Talk about Ben and his lack of education and his compelling story.
Reading Level/Age
Young adult, ages 12 and up
Why I included this title
I found this book to be compelling so I wanted to include it for reluctant YA readers.
Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts
Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts
Sunday, December 6, 2009
Saturday, November 21, 2009
The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman
Gaiman, Neil. The Graveyard Book.
Illustrated by Dave McKean.
HarperCollinsChildren. 2008.
ISBN 97800605300921.
$17.99. Hardcover. 320 pages.
Readers Annotation
When his parents are murdered, a baby boy wanders into a graveyard where he is adopted by Mister and Mistress Owens. Nobody “Bod” Owens grows up amongst the dead, protected by the Jack of All Trades who hunts him.
Plot Summary
Nobody “Bod” Owens grows up in a graveyard after his parents and sister are brutally murdered one night. Named Nobody because he looks like nobody but himself, Baby Bod escaped by wandering into the graveyard. His ghostly mother pleading for his life convinces Mistress Owens to adopt the youngster and raise him as her own. With the protection of the graveyard, and his guardian Silas, Bod grows up knowing few living people. Silas, neither living nor dead makes sure that Bod receives the food and clothing a living child needs. This denizens of the graveyard provide his early education, and eventually a living tutor is hired to educate Bod when Silas goes away. Miss Lepescu, his tutor, moonlights as a weredog, and is assigned as additional protection for him. There are many dangers in the graveyard for a young man, and Bod experiences most of them. He meets ghouls who take him across the underground desert to their secret city. It is Miss Lepescu who saves him. The dangers in Bod’s short lifetime seem never ending. Bod is thirteen years old when the Jacks of All Trades arrive at the graveyard. It is up to Bod and his friend Scarlett to find a way to destroy them all. Scarlett is one of the few living characters. She appears in the story when Bod is very young, and again when he is a teenager. The prophecy of the doom of the Jacks of all Trades now fulfilled Bod begins to lose his ability to see the ghosts. With Silas’ help, he leaves his home to make his way in the world of the living.
Critical Evaluation
The Graveyard Book won The John Newbery Medal in 2009. The book is a blend of several genres. Its blend of fantasy, horror and mystery makes this book an original. The cast of characters is both creepy and funny. The murderous Jacks of all Trades are creepy villains. However, I never understood just what their job description entailed. Bod’s guardian Silas, who is neither living nor dead, is never fully explained. Although he is his guardian, he is not affectionate. He sees to Bod’s earthly needs, but we are never privy to his reasoning. The Owens’s are the perfect adoptive parents for Bod, kind, loving and loyal, they died childless in the 1700s’. The ghostly characters are interesting because they cover a range of historic periods. Their opinions are always based on the knowledge from their living time periods. While the overarching theme of this story is the affirmation of life, it is masterfully told through the eyes of the dead. Gaiman has left the ending open for a sequel to take place. Although this book is written for younger teens, it is a good read for reluctant older teens.
Information about the author
Gaiman, born and raised in England currently resides new Minneapolis, Minnesota. He has won numerous awards for his work, including: the Hugo, Nebula, Bram Stoker, and Mythopoeic awards. You can find out more about him on his website at http://www.neilgaiman.com/, or on his blog at http://journal.neilgaiman.com/2009/11/blood-blood-in-unimaginable-quantities.html.
Genre
Fantasy, horror, mystery
Curriculum ties
None
Challenge Issues
None
Challenge defense ideas
There are no apparent challenge issues associated with this book. In the case that a challenge comes up, there are some things that you can do to start. You could read the book and become familiar with the content. Refer to the library collection development policy, and get reviews from reputable sources and teens that have read the book. You can find out more about this book on Amazon.com at http://www.amazon.com/Graveyard-Book-Neil-Gaiman/dp/0060530928/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=electronics&qid=1258862647&sr=8-1
Booktalking Ideas
1. Discuss why Bod is adopted by the Owens’s.
2. Talk about his guardian Silas.
Reading Level/Age
Children and Young Adults. Ages 10 and up.
Why I included this title
Although this book is written for younger children it has a timeless quality. It is also extremely well written, and it won many awards.
Sunday, November 15, 2009
The Dreaming (Volume 1) by Queenie Chan
Chan, Queenie. The Dreaming (Volume 1).
TokyoPop. 2006.
ISBN 1427800057
$7.99. Paperback. 192 pages.
Readers Annotation
Twin sisters, Amber and Jeanie, have been accepted into an exclusive Australian boarding school, but it comes with a warning – don’t go into the bush!
Plot Summary
When twin sisters, Amber and Jeanie arrive at their exclusive Australian boarding school, their aunt (who is leaving as they arrive) tells them to hide the fact that they are actually twins from the vice-principal. There are rumors that the school is haunted, but their new friends, Schala and Millie, assure them that the rumors are silly girl stuff. As the girls investigate their new home, mean Mrs. Skeener, the vice-principal, discovers them. The pair is warned never to enter the bush at night because students have disappeared. Amber, the more sensitive sister begins to have unexplained horrifying dreams that she is being pulled into the bush. In her dreams she encounters women in long dresses standing under bleeding trees. The dream is frightening, but soon the twins discover that they are dreaming the same dream. After performing a séance, and another encounter with Mrs. Skeener, Amber is ready to leave the academy. When their friend Millie becomes ill, the girls are worried. When Millie disappears from her bed, they are frightened. Weeks later, as they search the grounds, Amber begins to recognize the forest from her dreams. Amber stumbles upon a water hole. As her shoe dislodges a stone into the water, the body of Millie rises from the depths.
Critical Evaluation
Author Queenie Chan provides a wonderfully creepy manga horror novel. This is the first book in a trilogy. The story is original and the artwork is typical manga style. Chan has created an interesting look for this book. The school hidden deep in the Australian bush, the truly creepy paintings on the walls, the hidden doors, the tight-lipped teachers all add to the imagery. Chan gives her characters interesting costumes to wear. The schoolgirls aren’t relegated to uniforms as in some other manga I’ve seen. Yet the costumes worn by the dream women are whimsical, and do not represent any specific time period, and they have a distinctly gothic feel. I enjoyed this book. It left me wanting to complete the trilogy. This is a good book for reluctant young adult readers.
Genre
Horror, manga format.
Information about the author
Queenie Chan was born in Hong Kong in 1980. She immigrated with her family to Australia when she was six-years-old. Chan creates her drawings by hand, and adds tone using a computer. You can find out more about Chan here http://www.queeniechan.com/, although it doesn’t appear that the website has been updated since 2007.
Curriculum ties
None
Challenge Issues
None
Challenge defense ideas
There are no apparent challenge issues associated with this book. In the case that a challenge comes up, there are some things that you can do to start. You could read the book and become familiar with the content. Refer to the library collection development policy, and get reviews from reputable sources and teens that have read the book. You can find more information about this book on Amazon.com at http://www.amazon.com/Dreaming-Vol-1-Queenie-Chan/dp/1598163825/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1258327844&sr=1-1
Booktalking Ideas
1. Discuss how the twins, Jeanie and Amber, come to be at the school.
2. Talk about the rumors of missing students.
3. Talk about the disturbing dreams the twins are having
Reading Level/Age
Young adult. Ages 14 and up.
Why I included this title
I wanted to add some manga titles to my list. I found this one at my local library.
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