In this tribute to the life of Moomin author Tove Jansson, a young girl pursues five naughty, troll-like creatures.
Tove arrives at her summer home, where Moomin-like drawings adorn the wall. She begins exploring the striking yet desolate island, a prominent setting in Jansson's life and work. Here, the semi-biographical elements diverge into a fantasy that, per Soloy’s author’s note, was “inspired by Tove’s life and the stories she wrote about her own childhood” (readers will need to consult the backmatter to make that connection). Tove visits a friend—a small, hairy brown creature—to care for his five wild daughters, all “tiny as shells.” A gust of wind blows the youngsters away, and Tove follows, picking up treasures and musing about the island’s mercurial nature before finally locating the wayward girls. She returns home, soaked but satisfied, to her mother’s warm sweater and “piping hot pancakes.” The narrative is pleasingly crisp yet contemplative; Soloy describes salvageas “a gift the sea gives you” and asks readers to “imagine never getting soaked to the bone and then getting dry again…How dreadful!” But it’s her rugged, elemental digital illustrations that steal the show. Thick black outlining and gorgeous, darkly atmospheric, Jansson-inspired backgrounds of stormy skies and sea contrast against slashes of light and warm, colorful domestic scenes.
All readers will find the handsome illustrations a wonder, while Tove Jansson enthusiasts will adore the homage.
(Picture book. 4-9)