Month: April 2012

adapted by Bobbi J. G. Weiss

Here\’s a little confession: I always did like The Lion King. So when I was idly browsing through the junior-fiction graphic novel shelf at the library, I picked this one up, just to see what it was like. I was pleasantly surprised. I was afraid the book would just have still shots of images from the movie, but instead it was all drawn by artists Sparky Moore and Jo Meugniot- and very well done. The style felt true to the film but also had its own character which I liked very much. Except for the hyenas. They felt just a bit too cartoony and gangly to me. The storyline follows the original very close; it\’s been years since I actually saw it so I don\’t recall all the details, but not much felt left out. Except for the parts where the mandrill marks the lion cub in a ceremony, it was just alluded to, not really part of the story and might not make sense if you hadn\’t seen the original version. But who hasn\’t seen The Lion King?

In reading all these books I\’ve come to realize quite quickly that each graphic novel has its own character, its own style and feel. I don\’t quite know how to describe it, or if there are terminology for these styles. Something about this one reminded me very much of the Prince Valiant comics I used to see in the sunday papers (but never read- it was one of the very few comics I found boring). Well, if you like the movie, I\’d recommed this one for a quick, enjoyable little read. Even better, looking around online I stumbled across this graphic novel about lions that escape from a zoo in wartime- it looks fantastic and my library has a copy! I\’m so excited to read that one next.

rating: 3/5 …….. 48 pages, 2007

Adventures in Burrwood Forest

by John Lechner

This graphic novel is aimed at younger kids. It\’s about a little sticky burr in the forest who lives with a bunch of other burrs in a little village (very cute). The other burrs all have prickly personalities, but Sticky is different. He\’s kind and considerate. He likes doing art and music. His ways get him ostracized by the group, and while running away from them, he gets lost inside a \”maze tree\” where he helps some fireflies who are lost, too. Upon returning home Sticky, with the help of his new firefly friends, saves his village from some rampaging dogs. Then he\’s a hero and the others welcome him home, deciding it\’s not so bad to have someone around who\’s different.

The book is fun. Woven into the story are some facts about forest wildlife and such, as Sticky makes observations to share with the reader. And since he\’s a burr, he\’s always getting stuck to things by accident- a dog\’s tail, a bird\’s feather, a mossy tree trunk! It\’s got a nice message for kids about accepting others for who they are. There\’s a website, too.

rating: 3/5 …….. 56 pages, 2007

more opinions:
 Literature Blog
There\’s a Book
Books 4 Your Kids

vol 5

by Sayuri Tatsuyama

Clover tries to get out of preparing for her tests, again. She wants to invite Rambler to stay in her house when it rains, but he mysteriously refuses to leave his tent. Clover and Hickory magically exchange bodies- but will they reverse the spell in time? (and of course they discover that it\’s not all roses, being someone else). Mallow tries to figure out what she wants to be when she grows up. She finds she has an admirer, and Kale meets his pen-pal- who isn\’t at all like he\’d pictured. I liked most of these stories, but I didn\’t really care for how the book ended. I was expecting to see an entire storyline about Clover\’s adventures with Rambler, and instead there\’s build-up to the event: the entire forest community shows their support for Clover to follow her dream, and a forest fire threatens to ruin her plans. Then we see her go off, and the next page she returns to the forest to see all her friends grown up. I felt cheated. I wanted to see some exploring adventures! Plus the author stated quite clearly throughout the book that this was the last one, so there won\’t be another volume just of her travels, like I half-hoped.

There is a very sweet bonus-story at the end that shows how Clover and Rambler first met. I liked that. He\’s my favorite character of them all, next to the quiet, unshakable Hickory (flying squirrel).

rating: 3/5 …….. 192 pages, 2010

vol 3

by Sayuri Tatsuyama

In the third volume of Happy Happy Clover, the bunnies and their friends navigate friendships, crushes and the ins and outs of Heart-Leaf Day (a tradition like Valentine\’s day) They wake Blackberry the bear too early from his hibernation, and attempt to journey to another forest to make a mail delivery. There are more magical elements in this volume: Clover uses a charm to try and avoid a test she\’s not prepared for, she gets transformed into a monster by Cinnamon Fox\’s magic stone, and the animals all get taken in by a story about beans telling their future. I liked the story that showed one of Rambler\’s travels to another forest, and also the one where Clover convinces her parents to let her stay home alone while they go on a short trip. There was more of the moles in this volume- I find them kinda strange, but not as annoying as the rapping birds. At the end of the book is a little strip that shows some of the daily trials the main characters have to deal with- Shallot\’s is getting buried under the piles of his beloved books!

rating: 3/5 …….. 192 pages, 2009

more opinions:
Slightly Biased Manga

vol 2

by Sayuri Tatsuyama

Another volume of manga for kids, about a little rabbit and her friends. Because this is still a rather new format for me, I\’ve been enjoying the little stories and not focusing much on its structure. On the third book, though, I started to notice some things. The stories roughly follow the seaons: usually the opening tale is during winter, then spring comes, followed by summer, autumn but the final stories are in winter again. I like that, it feels like I\’m reading through an abbreviated year. At the end of each tale is a small panel giving further details or events related to the story, it\’s called \”Clover\’s Fun Doodle Pad\” and is sometimes even funnier than the main story. I like how each of these has a month named by something that occurs at that time in nature: \”the month when fireflies dance\” or \”the month when leaves turn red\” etc. Although most of the content is grounded in nature- the rabbits love veggies, are afraid of humans, their bear friend hibernates, etc. – there are also lots of human elements too: they live in houses, cook, sleep in beds. The young ones go to school, there\’s a postal service, the birds (annoying) rap everything they say, they play musical instruments…

Well, anyway, some of the things that happen in this book: Clover tries to trick Rambler into taking her traveling with him by challenging him to an obstacle race, but Rambler gets stuck. She runs into a human girl who wants to keep her as a pet, but Clover\’s having none of that! Shallot- a very bookwormish bunny- prefers reading to playing and is puzzled when the other young rabbits want to be his friend. The rapping birds (their rhythm and rhymes are awful) compete with the bunnies to see who can deliver a message more accurately. Clover confronts a ghost. Kale\’s little brothers try to turn themselves into a package so they can be part of the mail delivery. The animals\’ teacher, an owl, goes away for a conference so the young one\’s fathers take turn substituting; Clover is embarrassed by her dad\’s ineptitude (at first). Clover tells a story about Santa Claus to the baby bunnies, but when she discovers Santa only delivers to human children, she and her friends have to make gifts (quite a challenge!) to avoid disappointing the little ones. But the best part of the book to me was at the end- a little afterword segment that highlighted some of the characters. In Rambler\’s piece, everyone admires him and speculates what hardships and trials he braved in his travels- as evidenced by his tattered ears, of course. Then he tells what they really came from, all mundane injuries like scratching a bug bite too hard. It made me laugh.

rating: 3/5 …….. 192 pages, 2009

more opinions:
Manga Maniac Cafe
Slightly Biased Manga

vol 1

by Sayuri Tatsuyama

Over the past few days I\’ve been enjoying reading the Happy Happy Clover manga series alongside my kid. (I needed a break from the seriousness that was the last book). I have to keep reminding her not to spoil the surprises by telling me all the funny and cool things that happen in the books- she read through them a lot quicker than I (having more time on her hands).

So in volume 1, the reader meets Clover the bunny just as she is making a new friend, the shy lop-eared rabbit Mallow. Other events in the book: Clover finds a haunted part of the forest, a wandering rabbit makes a visit, Mallow braves a steep sledding hill, a monster prevents the bunnies from gathering mushrooms, the young animals try to hide their dismal report cards, and Clover tries to find out what Hickory the flying squirrel is afraid of. I think my favorite story was the one where Clover is given the task of delivering a secret love letter. The drawings are cute, the stories fun and full of little morality lessons at the same time (but its not so obvious as to be annoying).

rating: 3/5 ……… 188 pages, 2006

a memoir of anorexia and bulimia

by Marya Hornbacher

Wasted is a first-person narrative about nine or ten years of a severe eating disorder. What began as mere curiosity- what would happen if I do this? – combined with a skewed sense of self-image and body consciousness, the author began binging and purging when she was just nine years old. She tried it again, more and more often until it became a dangerous habit. Overly concerned with her appearance, she obsessed over her weight and food intake. Hornbacher is very scrutinizing about the dynamics of her family and her personality traits that combined to catapult her into a way of life that threatened to destroy her. She chronicles the downward spiral of her health in a very stark manner. I kept thinking: now it will stop, now surely she will listen to all those around her begging her to turn around, but it didn’t. Eventually she became anorectic and simple started to starve. The details of what happens to your body when you do that are simply horrifying. I kept feeling astonished that she could be so aware of what was happening to her, and so powerless to stop it at the same time. I wondered at her strong presence of mind, that she could write so clearly about her experiences and feelings; she even read her own medical records and shared in the book what her doctors and therapists had to say about her condition. She was hospitalized and institutionalized on several occasions, started to recover, had relapses, did her best to fool the doctors and continue the destruction of her body. It makes the reader squirm.

Quite a few of the reviewers on Amazon decry this book with alarm- they say in the hands of the wrong person it can enable someone to do this to themselves, because it goes into such honest detail about how the author fed her disease. I know I wouldn’t let my daughter read it until she’s an adult, and I’m not one to censor her reading by any means. You might ask: why keep it on the shelf at all? but I found it an astonishing read, a valuable one- and it is so well-written. So eloquent, vivid, precise. (She’s also a reader, one who took solace in books, which made me sympathize, and liberal quotes from Alice in Wonderland sprinkled throughout, which I loved). I don’t want to get rid of the book, I just want to be careful. My daughter, only seven, is already quite conscious of her body image and occasionally asks me if she weighs too much or little (she doesn’t, either one). I just don’t want her getting any unhealthy ideas from this book.

This book is powerful, frightening and utterly riveting. I had a difficult time putting it down, even though several times I wanted to stop reading. Sometimes I had to take a break when a particular description just made me feel sickened, but I always picked it up again, had to know how far she went, how she recovered, where she stood now.

She is no longer dying, but doesn’t sound completely healthy yet, either- according to what the afterword relates. It seems that this disease is one that never really leaves one, even when you think you have overcome it.

Picked up this one at a library sale, on a whim.

Rating: 4/5
298 pages, 1998

I came across my collection of handmade bookmarks in the drawer and realized I haven\’t done a giveaway in a long time. These bright flower ones match the spring mood, so I thought I\’d put them up for grabs! I think these are some kind of tiny orchid species, but not sure. Anyway, they\’re pretty! If you\’d like to have these laminated bookmarks, simply leave a comment before next weekend (4/21) when I\’ll pick a winner at random. Open worldwide.

I have a new favorite place.

About once a year we take a little drive (well, four hours- seems pretty long with the baby) through Maryland to Ocean City to spend a few days at the beach. I usually make the effort to visit Mason Books which is just a few blocks from the beach, but as it was easter sunday this time the shop was closed. I was pretty disappointed. So this time we plotted to stop at a used bookstore I\’ve always seen from the highway. Every other year we\’ve been either too tired to stop, or didn\’t see the building until it was too late to slow down. This time we used my husband\’s navigation tool on his iphone to see exactly where were were in relation to the shop so we could find it.

It\’s in a little town called Trappe. Unicorn Bookshop looks like a small building, but inside it is just amazing. The rooms are simply crammed with books- shelves to the ceiling, cases and stacks on the floor. It\’s the kind of place you could poke around in for hours and never notice the time going by. It\’s very well-organized too, which I really appreciated- everywhere in the shop are signs posted telling you just where to find which kinds of books. The first room of interest I found had a wall of children\’s books and there I came upon my first treasures- a group of old books by Ernest Thompson Seton!

This is an author I have long admired, but seldom had the chance to read- most of his stuff is out of print. And several of the titles here were ones I\’d in particular been wanting to get my hands on- Two Little Savages (boys\’ adventures in the woods) and Lives of the Hunted. I simply snatched them all.

Nearby found a Thornton Burgess- I\’m amassing quite a collection of those. I have about fourteen of his books of animal stories, now, and keep looking for more. Then I stepped across the aisle and found myself facing the shelves of nature writing. There was Gerald Durrell! and Hal Borland! and Sally Carrighar! and I simply had to stop before I went even further. I didn\’t even go into any other rooms, or dig through any of the stacks on the floor (though regretfully I feel certain I could have found more Burgess there) because I knew what was in my hands would already cost me a pretty penny.

When I got to the counter I promptly said: \”I love your shop!\” and the man smiled at my stack of books and said \”I can see that you do.\” He who rung up my purchase was a little old man with a stooped back but quite spry. He did everything old-school. He wrote down each title and price in a huge ledger book, by hand, humming the titles and numbers quietly to himself. Then he added it up on an adding machine, used a carbon-copy to take my card and wrote the receipt by hand, too. There was a new-looking flatscreen Apple monitor on the book-cluttered desk, but otherwise no sign of modern technology. It was completely charming. The ledger book was held open by a heavy clasp in the figure of a unicorn, too. I came out of that place simply beaming with delight.

I begged my husband to forgive the cost, promised I would not make any more extravagant book purchases this year, and that we must come back next time!

If you visit the bookshop\’s website, there\’s a nice little video there. I didn\’t even notice the clocks when I went in! And if you\’re so inclined, you can see a few pictures of our little beach vacation here. I probably should have named this post The Splurge, ha ha!

vol 4

by Sayuri Tatsuyama

I\’m still feeling my way in terms of reading graphic novels; not sure yet what all the different distinctions are. This one, I think, is considered kids\’ manga. I found it cute and amusing. Happy Happy Clover is a series about a little bunny and her friends in a forest. The book contains a dozen little stories that can stand alone. Of course, I started with volume four, the one I found on the library shelf, so I don\’t have all the backstory, but it was pretty easy to figure out what was going on. Clover seems to be quite the mischievous little bunny; she\’s stubborn, has a quick temper, and is something of a tomboy, as I realized while reading \”A Star is Born\”, wherein Clover finally consents to attend a girls\’ party full of baking cookies, embroidery and girly talk. She\’d really rather be outside doing some extreme sledding! In another story, Clover wants to visit her grandfather, and sets off on the journey by herself, even though she\’s been forbidden to travel so far. Migrating ducks spread horror stories among the animals in another, making them all terrified of a mysterious black chestnut. A fourtune-telling fox pays a visit, Clover\’s friend Kale relates what it was like to become a new big brother, and Clover\’s hatred for her green veggies comes to haunt her, in other stories.

The tales are all quite entertaining, as well as presenting a subtle lesson for kids. In the end, there\’s even a little segment showing how the author/illustrator goes through the process of creating the book and getting it printed. I liked it quite a bit, and when I was done handed the comic book to my seven-year-old. She read it all during our drive to the beach, and when we got back I promptly picked up volumes 1-3 from the library so we can read more of Clover\’s little adventures.

This is the first time I\’ve read a book printed the same way it is in the original Japanese, that is read from right to left, back to front. It took quite a bit of getting used to, but wasn\’t too difficult an adjustment. My daughter loved the novelty of \”reading a book backwards\” and when I showed her the shelf where I\’d found children\’s graphic novels at the library today, she wasn\’t interested much in the characters or plots presented, but only wanted to find another book she could read backwards!

rating: 3/5 …….. 188 pages, 2006

DISCLAIMER:

All books reviewed on this site are owned by me, or borrowed from the public library. Exceptions are a very occasional review copy sent to me by a publisher or author, as noted. Receiving a book does not influence my opinion or evaluation of it

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