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The Invention of Hugo CabretBUY FROM AMAZON.COM
Price: $15.63
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Orphan, clock keeper, and thief, Hugo lives in the walls of a busy Paris train station, where his survival depends on secrets and anonymity. But when his world suddenly interlocks with an eccentric, bookish girl and a bitter old man who runs a toy booth in the station, Hugo's undercover life, and his most precious secret, are put in jeopardy. A cryptic drawing, a treasured notebook, a stolen key, a mechanical man, and a hidden message from Hugo's dead father form the backbone of this intricate, tender, and spellbinding mystery. Amazon.com Exclusive
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More from Brian Selznick
PRODUCT DETAILSPublisher: Scholastic PressPub. Date: 30th January 2007 Catalog: Book Media: Hardcover Number Of Pages: 544 Ean: 9780439813785 Isbn: 0439813786 ABOUT THIS BOOKUSER REVIEWS
I have not read this book myself, but gave it as a birthday gift to an 11-year-old. I chose it based on Amazon reviews. His mother reports that he LOVED the book and asked her if it is "okay to read a book twice?"
This is a great tool to have to give background and helpful information about the book and the author. The kids I showed the DVD to loved it and it helped them understand the book and not be overwhelmed by it!
A surprisingly complex book for children by Brian Selznick, told in pictures and words, about loss, trust, magic, dreams, the history of the cinema and finding one's purpose. Selznick is both the author and the illustrator of this 20th century fairy tale which explores how people's fates can interlock, like the wheels and cogs of the automaton which Hugo seeks to rebuild.
This book can reach readers on many different levels. Movies, Inventions, Mechanical Beings (robots), train stations, orphans... they are all here. THe illustrations in this book are as essential to the text, and one may compare this to old silent films where on sees the picture, then words come up on the screen. No surprise that the illustrator and author is related to a major historical film director. If you are a kid, don't let the number of pages keep you from this book... with so many pages of pictures, it is not much reading. On the other hand, if you are an adult, don't shy away from this because of the pictures....rather, relax and enjoy the magical world and atmosphere, and really look at the incredible detail of the illustrations.
There was a frequent segue phrase used on Monty Python's Flying Circus: "And now, for something completely different . . .," and I feel like that this book fits that perfectly. On one level, this is basically a mystery story about a twelve-year-old orphan boy, Hugo Cabret, who lives in a Paris train station in about 1930. As the story progresses, we discover, gradually, the secrets that led to him living alone and secretively in the train station, where he keeps all the clocks working well and on time. We also discover the secrets behind the lives of the old man who runs the toy shop in the station, Papa Georges, and of his goddaughter, Isabelle, and to a lesser extent, Hugo's new friend, the one-eyed man named Etienne. Their secrets are interwoven, and the connecting and discovery of those secrets will have an impact on Parisian culture. What does the story have to do with magic, illusion, clock-making, complex mechanics, and the early history of film-making? Everything! The story itself is done well, with interesting characters, a breath-taking pace, and a good degree of plot complexity, especially with how the secrets are gradually uncovered, and have fascinating interconnections and ramifications that stretch well beyond the characters. However, that is not what makes this book stand out. What does move this book into the category of "And now, for something completely different?" The format! By topical genre, this book is a mystery, aimed at ages six to ninety-six, but the format, or presentation, is something I have never seen before. I have read books where illustrations are an important adjunct to the text. A good example is How to Keep Dinosaurs by Robert Mash. I have read good graphic novels, with The Hedge Knight - Second Edition [Graphic Novel] by George R.R. Martin being a prime example. The Asterix and Obelix books are good examples of comic books with enough mature connotations and subtexts that they appeal to some adults. I have not yet read, or viewed, The Arrival by Shaun Tan, which is a virtually textless tales of the struggles of an immigrant adjusting to a new culture, but The Invention of Hugo Cabret is not that, either, as text is an integral part of the story. The Invention of Hugo Cabret is something else, yet again. Of its 525 pages, roughly 300 pages are beautiful illustrations, mainly complex, detailed pencil drawings by the author, Brian Selznick. Mr. Selznick was an illustrator before he became an author, and his skill and love for the visual medium sings loudly and clearly in this work of art. A typical sequence features a series of sequential drawings, perhaps covering seven or eight pages, presenting a key piece of the story, followed by an interlude of two to four pages of text, that often features dialogue and background history, presented by one or more of the characters, as they pry at, and unearth, and unravel each other's interrelated secrets. Even the paper speaks of the author's love of art, as it is all wood-free, woven paper, that is heavy and semi-glossy in texture. I would love to stroll throw a museum with this story, presented large, displayed upon the walls, probably underground, with dark and light areas, illumination-wise, and the hallways twisting and turning. If it were presented that way, many visitors would end up running through, as they get entranced by, and caught up in, this well-told story of tragedy, buried history, and triumph. They would want to devour it as fast as possible, and then run right back through. -- Chris McCallister, author of Coming Full Circle SIMILAR ITEMS: |

Dear readers,
Brian Selznick on a "Deleted Scene" from The Invention of Hugo Cabret


Rave review from an 11-year old reader