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THE BOY WHO LIVED IN A SHELL by John Himmelman Kirkus Star

THE BOY WHO LIVED IN A SHELL

Snippets for Wandering Minds

by John Himmelman ; illustrated by John Himmelman

Pub Date: March 18th, 2025
ISBN: 9780823458455
Publisher: Margaret Ferguson/Holiday House

Is it poetry, or is it philosophy? Only child readers can tell.

It’s clear that Himmelman has too long reined in his instincts to fit the picture-book form. Now he’s let loose with a cavalcade of delightfully chaotic, boisterous, and thought-provoking verse. The book calls them “snippets,” most would dub them “poems,” and while both are correct, that label is also insufficient. The titular hero writes brief stories on the walls of the shell for one and all to read. Punctuated by interstitial pen-and-ink illustrations, each story/poem works by its own peculiar internal logic; many are imbued with a dry wit. A wizard turns a potato into a different potato (“one that looked just like / the first one”) to oohs and aahs; as Himmelman points out, “It didn’t take much to be a wizard in those days.” Some turn achingly poignant, such as several poems that follow a pair of dogs attempting to reunite; another asks, “Can a shadow have a shadow?” If Shel Silverstein were pared down to his core elements, you might end up with such a volume. By turns humorous, charming, and bizarre, these stories will keep readers musing; they’ll especially appreciate the postscripts on how all the various characters turn out in the end. Characters have skin the white of the page.

Overflowing with oomph and pizzazz, this collection will take up space in children’s minds for years to come.

(Poetry. 7-12)