There is something fundamentally sad about giant creatures – the outsized outsider, often beset with health problems and treated cruelly. But they are also, of course, special, as in The True Tale of a Giantess: The Story of Anna Swan, which is about an almost eight-foot-tall Canadian who lived in the 1800s.
The True Tale of a Giantess
The Story of Anna Swan
Anne Renaud
Illustrated by Marie Lafrance
Kids Can Press
$18.99
cloth
32pp
9781771383769
Anna is a brave young woman – “I dream of a life as big as me” – and she convinces her parents to let her move to New York City to share her uniqueness with the world. Her adventures are told in concise poetic wording, and images transport readers back in time with evocative skies and lively historical details.
It’s not at all bad for Anna, who finds love, travels the world, and counts the Queen of England as a friend, but Renaud hints at the hardships she must have endured and at the difficulties of literally not fitting in: “On happy days, I did not have to squeeze into my world. Outside was my favourite place to be.”
***
From beloved author and illustrator Marie-Louise Gay comes Mustafa, a tale of a boy finding his way in a new country.
Mustafa
Marie-Louise Gay
Groundwood Books
$19.95
cloth
40pp
9781773061382
did in his old country, others are new. He has a special interpretation of his new world, showing the value of fresh eyes. “The next day, Mustafa sees shiny red bugs with black spots. They look like jewels.”
All the mixed media illustrations are expertly crafted with pleasing details and textures, but an opening sequence of a watercolour moon in its different phases depicting the journey of Mustafa’s family to their new home is especially beautiful. Leaves are vibrant, dense scribbles made with
the brightest orange crayon for Mustafa’s first fall, accurately conveying the incredibleness of the season.
It’s heartbreaking to watch Mustafa feel ignored in his new country, but slowly, despite a language barrier, he makes a friend, and a kind of healing process begins, in part through drawings. Small gestures can help a person feel at home.
***
In seasoned illustrator and author Marianne Dubuc’s Up the Mountain Path, aged and adorable red-cheeked Mrs. Badger lives an enviably simple and aesthetically pleasing life, which every Sunday includes a walk up the mountain. On her walks, she meets her animal friends and admires and collects natural items like mushrooms. Most of the enchanting pencil and watercolour illustrations depict the weekly walk, but others zoom in on the treasures found, with labels too.
Up the Mountain Path
Marianne Dubuc
Princeton Architectural Press
$17.95
cloth
72pp
9781616897239
Lulu finds her figurative walking shoes and learns all about the path over many journeys. There are lessons, too, whose value extends beyond the trail. How small do you feel at the top of the world? “Small as a speck of stardust shimmering on the morning dew,” says Mrs. Badger.
They are not the only ones on the path, which is important when Mrs. Badger must retire from her climbs up the mountain. Lulu herself passes on the secrets and treasures of the path, and readers will be glad they too are along for the meditative walks.
***
The incident that sparks Matt Beam’s The Zombie Prince occurs before the book starts. Instead, the focus is on what happens next. Three boys gather in a schoolyard after one of them, Brandon, has been called a fairy by a classmate. Information about the incident isn’t shown directly, but must instead be deduced, giving the bullying less weight and space.
The Zombie Prince
Matt Beam
Illustrated by Luc Melanson
Groundwood Books
$16.95
cloth
24pp
9781554989973
Simple colourful illustrations help fill out the imaginary. Oscar declares himself a ghost who “next time […] will float invisibly in front of Brandon and block the mean words.” Our narrator is a vampire: “I suck bad things from the air […] that’s why my front tooth is missing. See?” And Brandon is dubbed a zombie prince. Details move deftly between the real and the imaginary, blurring the two.
The friends can’t totally fix their friend’s hurt, but with a little empathic imagination they’re able to show solidarity with Brandon. “‘Yeah,’ he says finally. ‘A zombie prince—I like that.’”
***
Julia is already friends with a skunk, a squirrel, and a groundhog, but she’s on a mission to grow the group in Andrew Katz and Juliana Léveillé-Trudel’s How to Catch a Bear Who Loves to Read. (Certain readers may especially enjoy the recurring fart contest involving Frieda, the skunk.)
How to Catch a Bear Who Loves to Read
Andrew Katz and Juliana Léveillé-Trudel
Illustrated by Joseph Sherman
CrackBoom! Books
$17.95
cloth
32pp
9782924786475
This how-to story is also an adventure, and tension mounts as the friends track Bertrand, the bear: “Julia’s heart went BA-BOOM as she took a step forward.” When they finally meet, a love of books seals the friendship. “There’s a lovely reading spot out on the porch,” says Bertrand, and the two new friends settle into comfortable-looking chairs perched outside his tree house to finish a book.
***
Little Sun is a pig with many thoughts. Each two-page spread in Jiu Er and Julie Nesrallah’s We Were Made for Each Other! presents one of these quasi aphorisms with a drawing or two. They range in subject matter from a tale about Little Sun’s life to pieces of advice, or even short stories. Some are addressed to Little Mouse, Little Sun’s best friend.
We Were Made for Each Other!
Jiu Er and Julie Nesrallah
Translated by Alexandre Zouaghi and Helen Roulston
The Secret Mountain
$22.95
cloth
112pp
9782924774229
Although the thoughts seem disconnected and don’t follow a plot, there are recurring characters, as well as themes of art, love, and happiness:
Life is also about asking questions
and wondering about things.
But there’s no doubt
that the more you question,
the harder it is to see clearly!
Other pages are left open-ended, including the meta moment when the author appears with a broken heart and Little Sun can do little to help her.
Watercolour drawings add to the stories with carefully considered details, such as Little Sun up on a high ladder in front of a blank wall with his paints. Little Mouse has an idea:
If you really don’t know what to draw,
Little Sun, why don’t you come down
and play for a while?
It’s consoling to know even prolific Little Sun sometimes has a block. mRb
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