Previously

Previously by Allan Ahlberg, illustrated by Bruce Ingman

This clever picture book starts with Goldilocks arriving back home “all bothered and hot.”  Then the reader gets to discover what happened previously.  As you read backwards through her time with the three bears, she meets Jack.  The story then changes to Jack and the Beanstalk, done backwards by seeing what happened previously.  The book continues moving into the past and through many different fairy tales, including the Frog Prince, Gingerbread Boy, and Cinderella.  And finally moves back through time until all there is left is Previously.

This is a joy to share with children.  The book starts innocently with Goldilocks and then starts to travel quickly, a tape unrolling through history.  Children will enjoy the premise immensely as they see their favorite fairy tale characters, know what is coming much of the time and anticipate the joy of it.  I particularly enjoyed the ending where we move backwards through infancy and then through rain, wind and nature.  A lovely way to end a book that never really ends.

The text is rhythmic and the use of the word previously helps with that effect.  Ingman’s art is a nice mix of paint and ink which manages to effectively capture the rush of time without clutter or loss of illustrative integrity.  Nicely done.

Because the premise of previously is contagious, you may want to have drawing paper at the ready for children to express their own lives or days this way.  My two children went to bed and then awoke talking about what they had done previously.  But as you know, that was previously, and now they are back to normal.  At least for the moment.

Off Season



The Off Season
by Catherine Gilbert Murdock.

Continuing the story started in Dairy Queen, readers join DJ as she is playing high school football.  Everything is going wonderfully in her life.  Brian Nelson is still in her life and has started kissing her, she has repaired her friendship with her best friend Amber, and her two older brothers are regularly appearing on TV playing college football.  But then things change.  Brian starts acting strangely when they are in public, her mother throws her back out, the family farm is struggling, and an accident throws the entire family into turmoil.  But the one thing we can all count on is that DJ knows how to face calamity head on and deal with it using humor and strength.

Second books can often be disappointing, especially following such an incredible debut novel.  But this one stands entirely on its own, perhaps even outdoing the first.  DJ’s voice continues to be authentic, witty and sharp as she faces disasters in her life.  As in the first book, she is an intriguing mix of power, tongue-tied shyness, and self-effacing humor.  In this second book, there are paragraphs of such powerful writing that they are gut-punchingly real:

“Mom started to cry.  Only it wasn’t crying like when you cry at a sad movie.  It was– it was the sound I imagine an animal making when her babies are dead.  Without words or breath or anything until the whole room vibrated…”

Searing writing like that mixed with humor creates an amazing rollercoaster of a book.  The secondary characters continue to be surprising, well-written and complex.  They all ring very true as does the complicated family dynamic. 

Highly recommended for those who enjoyed the first book with both books highly recommended if you haven’t read either of them.  Appropriate for teens, ages 14-18.

Brisinger

The next Christopher Paolini book has been announced!  The third book in the Inheritance series is titled Brisinger