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By Jane Mack
For Variety
BOOKS have been popular since
Gutenberg ushered in the age of the printing press in the mid-15th century.
Before the printing press, books with handwritten scripts and ornamented
alphabets captured interest, and still garner attention at museums. The
novel found its present form through transformations in the 17th century
(Don Quixote) and 18th century (Robinson Crusoe
and Gullivers Travels). We now have novels in specific
genres with popular appeal, like science fiction, mystery, thriller, romance
and fantasy.
Writing novels has generated mass appeal, and the easy availability of
advice and comradeship on the internet have spawned novel-writing endeavors
like National Novel Writing Month (www.nanowrimo.org) and blogs on every
conceivable topic related to writing. Writers who eschew traditional publishing
in order to get their books printed more quickly can use print-on-demand
technology and have their books reviewed on blogs like PODdy-Mouth or
POD Reviewer.
There are common threads in advice about writing novels, like the wisdom
that there are (depending on whos giving their opinion) only twenty-six,
twelve, seven, five, four or two basic plots in the world. With the ground
so well tilled, its hard to imagine an author coming up with anything
new or remarkable.
Yet we had J. K. Rowling, with her hugely successful Harry Potter (HP)
series, use a traditional form, an imaginative but conventional character-naming
technique, and the fertile material of existing history, myth and superstition,
yet combine them in such a fantastic and fresh way that we got something
new. Japanese manga has crossed-over to mainstream American novel-making,
so that we have graphic novels popping up in genre and young-adult fiction.
And now, we have a new art form in the mid-grade book.
THE INVENTION OF HUGO CABRET, by Brian Selznick (Scholastic, 2007) combines
new and old in a thoroughly delightful and innovative way to bring us
something new. Released just this month, the book is 530 pages in length.
Thanks to the HP and the Order of the Phoenix, we know that kids will
read long books if the story is good, so dont let the size of the
book scare you away. The cover is beautiful: rich vibrant colors and an
intricate keyhole on the front, with a charcoal portrait of a boy on the
spine and back. When the book is closed, the fat spine has just a slice
of face with eye, half a nose and mouth, and title in white at the bottom,
giving it an intriguing, unique appearance, easily found on a shelf.
But it is whats inside that makes this book truly remarkable and
one to be collected, as well as read repeatedly. The story
is told at first in pictures, like a graphic novel, or like an old-fashioned
silent film, with the pictures in charcoal and pencil, black and white,
mysterious and eerie. Then there is text that picks up where the pictures
leave off. Then the story weaves back and forth between pictorial art
and verbal art, seamlessly moving between the two forms, each playing
its part. The book is like a concert of instruments in perfect harmony.
Brian Selznick is well known in childrens literature. Ive
included at least two of the books he illustrated (THE SCHOOL STORY by
Andrew Clements, and WHEN MARIAN SANG by Pam Muñoz) in previous
reviews in this column. His talent as an artist, though, is transcended
by his power as a storyteller. Because THE INVENTION OF HUGO CABRET is
first and foremost a great story.
It opens at night, in Paris, in a train station. We get there through
pictures that close in like a camera lens, telescoping from the moon to
the Eiffel Tower, to the train station exterior. And then we go inside
the walls of the train station with a boy who keeps the clocks running.
And we feel his loneliness as he spies on a toy maker and the girl who
comes by the toy booth.
The boy, Hugo Cabret, clings to the only companion he has, a broken and
charred mechanical man that his father found in a museum attic. Hugo has
a notebook with pictures of the automaton and its internal mechanisms,
drawn by his father. Hugo dreams of fixing the automaton some day and
reading the message that it writes with the pen and ink that stands in
front of it. In Hugos mind, the message will tell him about his
father. Hugos parents are dead, and his uncle, the station timekeeper,
has been missing for months, his paychecks stacking up uncashed, while
Hugo does his job.
But the toy maker catches Hugo stealing a robotic mouse that Hugo wanted
for parts. And worse, the toy maker finds Hugos notebook and takes
it away. Hugo is desperate to retrieve the notebook so that he can fix
the automaton and find the message. And hes alone and hungry.
The girl, Isabelle, comes forward to speak to Hugo, to befriend him, to
help, but in her own way she causes him more problems. And the story unfolds
with the precision of a fine clockwork mechanism, the artistry of words
and images matching the moods of fear, desperation and discovery.
The story takes place in the past when movies are new and magical, and
it makes the connection between the surreal creations of moviemakers and
the otherworldly aspect of a robotic man writing a message. For example,
Hugos father, a clockmaker, felt inspired by a movie hed watched
by filmmaker Georges Méliès called A Trip to the Moon (which
you can watch here: http://www.archive.org/details/Levoyagedanslalune).
But the deeply researched underpinnings of the story dont intrude
on the pace and accessibility of it for young readers. And the appearance
of the real Georges Méliès is a bonus, not a
distraction. Boys and girls will love the train station, the clockworks,
the mystery. Readers of all ages will love the intrigue, magic and warm-hearted
resolution. And theres already talk of making this book into a movie,
with Martin Scorsese as the director! (Ages 9+).
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