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32 pp.
| Candlewick
| September, 2022
|
TradeISBN 978-1-53621-126-9$18.99
(2)
K-3
Illustrated by
Chris Turnham.
Readers meet poet and conservationist William Stanley Merwin (1927–2019) as a child, reading a book in his clover-and-dandelion-studded backyard. Alas, that's the closest he can get to the "wild places" he loves, as his family lives in a town "where the wild parts had been straightened out." This is depicted by Turnham as an oppressive grid, with smoke issuing from automobiles, chimneys of identical row houses, and a factory. Summertimes, though, are spent in the woods, "where trees grew where their seeds had fallen." As a young man, Stanley realizes "writing poetry was like visiting a wild place," but he still yearns to live among nature and moves to Hawaii. There he finds a plot of land on Maui that's been "wounded" by chemicals--and that he heals over decades until it is a thriving wilderness. Fountain uses a spare text that emphasizes Merwin's role of conservationist over that of poet (she does append one poem following her author's note). The metaphor of "unstraightening" is effective, and the message that "poisoned" land can be healed with care and time is a bracing one. Turnham's crisp illustrations are somewhat more effective for the "straightened-out" scenes than for Merwin's wilderness, where muted tones fail to capture true lushness, but his palm trees do spread out in profusion.
Reviewer: Vicky Smith
| Horn Book Magazine Issue:
September, 2022
247 pp.
| Little
| June, 2019
|
TradeISBN 978-0-316-42303-8$16.99
|
EbookISBN 978-0-316-42300-7
(4)
YA
Adolescent Shif is taken from his home (country unnamed) to a desert prison, where he becomes "Refugee 87," doomed to certain death. He escapes, makes his way to the coast, and boards a boat for European shores. The story, inspired by true events, is unevenly paced yet gripping, vivid, and often poetic.
(2)
YA
Bold Syd and sensitive Miranda share an unfortunate bond: each has lost her mother. Miranda's mom joined a cult years ago; Syd's alcoholic mom skipped town before Syd's freshman year. As this contemporary drama begins their senior year, Syd, too, disappears, leaving perceptive narrator Miranda to navigate yet another loss. Fountain tenderly explores the great pain and power of forging one's own identity as well as the inescapable influence of loved ones.