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Review of the Day: Scribble (Part One)

Review of the Day: Scribble (Part One)

August 21, 2007 by Betsy Bird

Scribble by Deborah Freedman. 
Knopf (a Random House imprint).
$15.99.
On shelves now.

I like "Scribble". No, I don’t think you understand. I reeeeeeally like "Scribble". I like its art and its style and its "message" (or whatever the equivalent term might be) and pretty much everything about it. The only problem with "Scribble" is that it’s not a flashy book. It’s sweet and subtle and as a result it’s probably not going to draw too much attention to itself. With that in mind, I charge each and every one of you to seek it out since no one’s gonna go out and do it for you. The picture book that shatters the reality between what you create and what you are is difficult to pull off. All the more so when it’s as fun, readable, and kid-friendly as "Scribble".

Oh, Emma. Thinking she knows everything. Emma’s one of those girls who goes around drawing princesses all the time. Lucie, on the other hand, prefers to draw kitties. When Emma, in her oh-so-superior way, informs Lucie that her cat looks more like a scribble than a feline, the younger sister retaliates by scribbling all over Emma’s newest princess picture. However, Scribble (the cat Lucie has drawn) grows curious about the sleeping princess, now trapped behind what appears to be a Giant Thicket. With a reluctant Lucie tagging behind, he attempts to free the beauty and save the day. Yet it’s only when the little girl agrees to help and undo the damage she’s done to the princess’s picture that everyone is allowed to live happily ever after.

Visually, the book really does pop. It starts with a kind of cartoony style. Individual panels and speech bubble break up the action with characters occasionally leaping off the page towards the reader. Eventually, as Emma leaves and Lucie’s imagination has a chance to expand, the piece of paper containing Scribble grows to immense proportions, completely obliterating the entire paneled scheme. Emma’s real cat, a small white one who takes to Scribble as recognizable kin, is always easy to spot against the yellow and pink background. Ditto Emma’s white shirt beneath her overalls. The color scheme of the book bounces back and forth between pink and yellow. Emma wears all pink and Lucie all yellow. Yet when Lucie crosses over from her yellow paper to Emma’s pink world, suddenly her overalls take on an unfamiliar rosy hue. On a related note, it’s interesting to watch the dynamic between the two sisters. They’re always shown across the table from one another, one on her pink side and one on her yellow. It’s fun to see how Lucie’s literal leap into her sister’s world helps change her own perspective.

Reading and rereading the book brings something new to the eye every time. Did you catch the moment near the end where Emma’s "sleeping" princess opens here eyes while Emma informs Lucie that kitties and princesses do not wed? Or that once Lucie has fully entered into Emma’s picture, the princess appears to be trapped within a castle made up of different shades of pink on pink? Even Scribble’s kiss on the princess’s cheek is a tiny yellow heart, and the result causes his own cheeks to take on a rose colored hue of their own. Everything has its place in this book, and the repeating colors really tie it all together.

And just apart from all of that, I really appreciate any book where a little girl character can wear yellow cat-bedecked overalls and short hair. Some books would have you believe that all little girls sport dresses and have long lovely locks 24/7. And how awesome is Scribble anyway? It is desperately hard for adults to draw like children. An adult who tries will usually mess up by getting proportions correct or will have lines too suspiciously smooth. Not Freedman. Scribble, as you can see from the cover, is absolutely perfect. Even when he starts moving about, his lines are absolutely remarkable. The oversized head coupled with the small body and wobbly legs. The princess isn’t too shabby either, but it’s really Scribble who steals the show time and time again. Best of all, I bet it wouldn’t be too difficult for child readers to draw "Scribbles" of their own if they were so inspired to do so.

It seems unfair to forget Freedman’s words in the midst of her clever art. Consider her use of dialogue and narrative. When Scribble and Lucie go on their quest, the book’s narration suddenly changes. Where before it was all speech bubbles and panels, now there’s a narrator giving voice to the mute Scribble’s thoughts and desires. Basically, the book becomes a real fairy tale for a little while, using terms like, "drowsy eyes and rosy cheeks." Even when Lucie follows her kitty to the other side, the book says that she goes through, "through acres of one color into another." Acres. That’s lovely.

(CONTINUED IN PART TWO)

Filed Under: Reviews

Review of the Day: Scribble (Part Two)

August 21, 2007 by Betsy Bird

(CONTINUED FROM PART ONE)

I found myself thinking about a couple things from Scott McCloud’s Understanding Comics when I read this book. McCloud states that people who read comics identify more readily with cartoonish characters than the ones who look more realistic. In this book, Lucie and her sister are relatively realistic with the princess and Scribble appearing as simplified cartoons. So it wouldn’t be too surprising if a kid reading this book ended up identifying with Scribble more than the girls, if we are to take McCloud’s theory to heart. McCloud also discusses the importance of "line" in a comic. At the end of "Scribble", Lucie has successfully gathered up the line of the scribble she placed on her sister’s picture. The last we see of it, her cat is playing with it as it dribbles off-screen. In many ways, this is a book about the very basics of cartooning, but in a way that’s fun for very young children.

The obvious equivalent to this book right off the top of my head would have to be something like The Three Pigs by David Wiesner. Other similarities include books like Bad Day at Riverbend by Chris Van Allsburg. I wouldn’t say that it was common for a character in a book to be aware of their status on a page, but at the very least it’s not viewed as too complex for children to understand. The real lure of "Scribble" is that even as the realistic main character starts interacting with her drawn cat scribble, we totally believe in her journey. It’s easy to interpret this story as the way in which Lucie deals with her guilt over scribbling over her sister’s picture and concocts this complex narrative of rescue and marriage as a kind of therapeutic release. Either that or it just a fun book for fun kids. No reason why it can’t be both, to my mind. It’s a remarkable package hiding within the most deceptively simple premise I’ve run across this year. It’s a book that’s smart enough for adults and kid-centric enough for its intended audience. A sleeper hit that I seriously hope you will not miss.

Online Reviews:   Infodad.com, Book Reviews 101, and Curled Up with a Good Book
 
MISC:
  • See Deborah Freedman’s Scribble page.
  • Hear the Just One More Book podcast on Scribble

Filed Under: Reviews

Your Tuesday Summary

August 21, 2007 by Betsy Bird

Summer’s winding down.  The wild look in your parental patrons’ eyes as they search desperately for any copies you might have of The Pigman and Me (32 holds and rising) isn’t going to go away for at least another week.  My advice?  Speak softly to them.  Be kind.  Find the items that you DO have and talk those books up.  And, if you get a moment, consider the following kidlit news available to you.

  • I wish I could say I was surprised that Peter Sis was interviewed on NPR regarding The Wall recently, but honestly they’d be crazy not to talk to him.  Now, in the past I’ve received requests to make him a Hot Man of Children’s Literature.  He’s cute and all, but may I give the award to his voice instead?  WHAT a great voice to have.  Someday I will be rich and I shall put out a compilation CD of different kidlit voices.  Imagine placing the sonorous tones of Sis alongside those of Shel Silverstein.  I bet you could accidentally short out your head that way.
  • Big A little a located a really fun piece in The Times called My first break: Bestselling children’s authors tell how they got published.  A smart American might ask all the bestselling authors they knew to do a similar piece.  Hmmmmm….
  • Some very interesting thoughts on A Wrinkle in Time over at Oz and Ends.  It’s funny to me that some people find this a disappointing adult re-read.  I’m always very pleased with L’Engle’s writing in the book, but I confess that I never considered the Cold War/McCarthy implications in the piece.  How odd.
  • From author Maureen Johnson, some fun with revision.
  • A very Lemony Snicket-like post has appeared on YA author Robin Brande’s blog.  It also appears to be one of her most popular.
  • The Lois Duncan book Hotel for Dogs is being turned into a movie starring Emma Roberts. This falls into the category of How Did Hollywood Find This?  I’m convinced that once in a while a book someone loved as a kid will end up on the silver screen long after it has fallen out of print. For example, my husband is friends with a lovely woman at Columbia University who’s currently working her tail off to get the rights to Snow Treasure. Duncan news found via Jen Robinson, who in turn got it from Miss Erin.
  • Two round-up in particular got my attention today.  The first is going to be incredibly useful to you librarians out there.  Just yesterday a woman came up to me at the reference desk asking, "Do you have a list of really good back-to-school titles for kids?"  Do I?  No.  No I don’t.  You know who does?  Wild Rose Reader.  Check out this magnificent compilation of different Back to School links.  You can bet I printed a couple of these out for my patron pronto.  Round-up #2 comes via Semicolon.  She has performed a whacked out bookshelf summary.
  • Yay! Clancy the Courageous Cow by Lachie Hume was recently shortlisted in Australia’s Chrichton Award for Children’s Illustration. Go, Clancy, go go go!  Better still, the Children’s Book Council of Australia just handed out their Book of the Year Award Winners for 2007. The picture book of the year? None other than the magnificent The Arrival by just-about-to-break-into-America-by-storm author/illustrator Shaun Tan. Of course. As if there would have been any doubt at all in our minds. Thanks to Kids Lit for the links.
  • Sometimes I just sit and gape at the levels of sheer dedication that go into a single Bottom Shelf Books piece. A current favorite: The divinity of eggplant.
  • Fun! I’ve found something to make my eyes bleed for a while. Many thanks to Gail Gauthier.
  • Would anyone like to go and see The Wolves in the Walls with me when it comes to town? Maybe we should do a class trip.
  • And finally, if watching movies is more your style, you can locate showings of The Hollywood Librarian at this nice site here.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

And the Award For Best Flap Copy Goes To . . .

August 21, 2007 by Betsy Bird

Several months ago The Longstockings played around with the idea of creating The Flappies; an award that would go to the best written flap copy on a book.  If they ever feel like doing so again, I’d like to nominate the flap for E. Lockhart’s upcoming novel The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks.  I’m going to copy it down here now.  I don’t review YA normally, but this is making me think I might need an exception now and then.  Here it is, word for word, and tell me it doesn’t make you want to read the book immediately:


Frankie Landau-Banks at age 14:
Debate Club.
Her father’s "Bunny Rabbit."
A mildly geeky girl attending a highly competitive boarding school.

Frankie Landau-Banks at age 15:
A knockout figure.
A sharp tongue.
A chip on her shoulder.
And a gorgeous new senior boyfriend: the supremely goofy, word-obsessed Matthew Livingston.

Frankie Landau-Banks.
No longer the kind of girl to take "no" for an answer.
Especially when "no" means she’s excluded from her boyfriend’s all-male secret society.
Not when her ex-boyfriend shows up in the strangest of places.
Not when she knows she’s smarter than any of them.
Not when she knows Matthew’s lying to her.
And when there are so many, many pranks to be done.

Frankie Landau-Banks at age 16:
Possibly a criminal mastermind.

This is the story of how she got that way.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Go Away

August 20, 2007 by Betsy Bird

I am pleased to announce that I was recently asked to participate in a three-way review with the nice young ladies of Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast.  Quite the honor.  Together, Eisha, Jules and I read and reviewed Cat Weatherill’s brand spanking new sequel to last year’s fantasy title Barkbelly.  Snowbone is now up on the 7-Imp site, and I couldn’t be more pleased.  It’s quite the honor to review things with Julies and Eisha.  They think things through, they do.  Nothing better than kidlit bloggers that take their material seriously.  Go check it out.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

They Scream To Me In My Sleep

August 20, 2007 by Betsy Bird

So sleepy.  Attended a wedding shower/bachlorette party two nights ago and I still haven’t recovered.  Reviews will have to wait a for a while as I recoup.  A pity too.  A recent Bookmoot post about the titles she has read but not yet reviewed got me to thinking. I’ve some books that need to be reviewed. Truth be told I have a whole friggin’ shelf of them. So which one should I review next? I leave it up to you, gentle viewers, to tell me the order in which my fiction should be done, always bearing in mind that I am only showing you the chapter books, and not the picture books, I have read.

Here’s what I have:

The Professor’s Daughter by Joann Sfar, illustrated by Emmanuel Guibert
The Misadventures of Bartholomew Piff: You Wish by Jason Lethcoe
Stoneheart by Charlie Fletcher
Attack of the Turtle by Drew Carlson, illustrated by David Johnson
Dawn and Dusk by Alice Mead
The Thing About Georgie by Lisa Graff
Feathers by Jacqueline Woodson
A Crooked Kind of Perfect by Linda Urban
The Secret History of Tom Trueheart by Ian Beck
Revolution is not a Dinner Party by Ying Chang Compestine
The Book of Lies by James Moloney
Elissa’s Quest by Erica Verrillo
Beyond the Spiderwick Chronicles: The Nixie’s Song by Tony DiTerlizzi and Holly Black
Middle School is Worse Than Meatloaf by Jennifer Holm
Samuel Blink and the Forbidden Forest by Matt Haig
Leepike Ridge by N.D. Wilson
Emmy and the Incredible Shrinking Rat by Lynne Jonnell
The Year of the Rat by Grace Lin

Help me to decide!  What needs a review the most?

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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