by Tom Dawe ; illustrated by Veselina Tomova ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 20, 2017
A few mild chills but bland and generic fare overall.
Supernatural talk and tales from a Newfoundland poet and lifelong resident.
Being more “talk” than “tales,” the nine episodes are mostly reminiscences in which narrators of both sexes recall hearing about the encounters of others with eldritch folk in spooky settings, including a headless ghost, a changeling in their baby’s crib, flickering “corpse candles” in a graveyard, or in some cases just scary spots in the woods. Though Dawe supplies source notes with further anecdotes, it’s not clear whether he’s actually recording stories he heard or spinning fragmentary memories and standard folkloric motifs into fictive creations. In either case, despite atmospheric language and Tomova’s dark and eerie linocut illustrations, readers are likely to feel distanced by the second- (or third-) hand narratives. Nor, though the author often refers to real locales, is there much beyond a vaguely Celtic air to give the tales a flavorsome sense of specific place or culture. There is no sign of racial or ethnic diversity in either pictures or text.
A few mild chills but bland and generic fare overall. (glossary) (Folkloric short stories. 8-11)Pub Date: Oct. 20, 2017
ISBN: 978-1-927917-13-8
Page Count: 60
Publisher: Running the Goat
Review Posted Online: July 16, 2017
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2017
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edited by Dan SaSuWeh Jones ; illustrated by Weshoyot Alvitre ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 7, 2021
Valuable both for its broad range and shivery appeal.
A mix of 32 timeless chillers and personal encounters with the supernatural gathered from Native American storytellers and traditions.
Carefully acknowledging his oral, online, and print sources (and appending lists of additional ones), Jones (Ponca) intersperses his own anecdotes and retellings with accounts by others collected in his travels. The generally brief entries are gathered into types, from brushes with ghosts or spirits (the latter distinguished by having “more complex agendas” than the former) to witches and monsters. In them, the tone ranges from mild eeriness—hearing an elder relative on the porch just moments after she died and seeing small footprints appear in wet concrete near the burial ground of an abandoned Oklahoma boarding school—to terrifying glimpses of were-owls, were-otters, a malign walking doll, and a giant water serpent with a “sinister smile.” They all join the more familiar (in children’s books, anyway) likes of Bigfoot and La Llorona. Linked to a broad diversity of traditions spanning the North American continent, the stories, both old—there’s one ascribed to the ancient Mississippian culture—and those given recent, even modern settings, are related in matter-of-fact language that underscores a common sense of how close the natural and supernatural worlds are. In sometimes-intricate ink drawings, Alvitre (Tongva) amps the creepiness by alternating depictions of everyday items with grinning skulls, heaps of bones, and the odd floating head.
Valuable both for its broad range and shivery appeal. (introductory notes) (Traditional literature. 8-11)Pub Date: Sept. 7, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-338-68160-4
Page Count: 176
Publisher: Scholastic Nonfiction
Review Posted Online: July 29, 2021
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2021
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