The Storm in the Barn by Matt Phelan (978-07636-3618-0)
This was definitely worth the wait. I'm glad I didn't try to lump it in with the other three books yesterday. I still read it quickly, but that's only because there was so little text. Most of the story is conveyed through the art, with a careful use of color. Browns and tans dominate, appropriate for a story set during the Dust Bowl, but there are careful spots of soft greens and blues, and, at one memorable spot, the red of blood.
Jack Clark's older sister cannot leave her bed, the dust is so bad. He's too young to do anything to help his father fix the car--all that is keeping them on the farm. There are no chores except occasionally watching his younger sister for his mother. He's bullied by boys in town. Then, he starts seeing things through the cracks in the Talbot barn. I won't say what Jack sees, because that is the crux of the story, but how he deals with it makes Jack one of the Jacks of fairy tale stuff--just like the stories he hears from the storekeeper and his sister's Oz books. I am so glad I got this book for my library (and very happy that Candlewick took the effort to give it a good binding and excellent quality paper).
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
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