Book Review: Sweep by Jonathan Auxier

Synopsis

Nan Sparrow is young, covered in soot and an orphan. She is a chimney sweep living in the Victorian London of the late 1800’s and five years ago her beloved benefactor simply known as the Sweep left, leaving her with but one gift, a small lump of coal.  With no one else to care for her, she finds herself working for a heartless chimney sweep overlord named Wilkie Crudd who regularly sends young children down dangerous chimneys. Through hard work, cunning and a little luck, Nan escapes one tight spot after another. But then one day, as she is cleaning the chimneys at Miss Mayhew’s Seminary for Young Ladies, Nan gets caught in a chimney fire and her luck runs out. In a fantastic miracle, her small lump of coal mysteriously transforms into an ash and coal monster who has carried her away to safety.  For the rest of the story, Nan and her monster who she calls Charlie make a way for themselves in this cruel world, protecting one another and helping other sweeps along the way.  

Review 

A Dickensian tale of adventure, fantasy and history, Sweep by Jonathan Auxier is a wonderful story of friendship, compassion and courage.  Auxier is masterful at creating characters rich with personality that readers will immediately grow to love.  The story itself is a mixture of historic fiction and fantasy and I thoroughly enjoyed the plot as it climbed to its climax. The description of the people and places of late 19th century Victorian London are masterful.  One reviewer wrote that the story was, “at once both magical and moralizing, hopeful and heartbreaking.” I couldn’t agree more. Sweep by Jonathan Auxier is a great book that I’ll be reading again soon.

  • Ages: 8 – 99
  • Awards: 2019 Sydney Taylor Book Award
  • Pages: 344
  • Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

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by Aaron G. Myers

Book Review: The Twenty One Balloons by William Pene du Buis

Synopsis

When Professor William Sherman’s hot air balloon begins losing air in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, the daring explorer is sure his end has come.  However, by chance winds and a bit of luck Sherman finds himself saved, washed up on a remote Island.  Within only a few minutes of arrival Professor Sherman discovers that the island is inhabited, and not by Polynesian natives but men in fine silk suits and women in gorgeous European gowns, a magnificent and glowing people whose likes the Professor has never seen before.  Professor Sherman has landed on the Island of Krakatoa, an Island made completely out of diamond.  Fueled by the world’s largest diamond reserve, the secret civilization of Krakatoa is the most luxurious and technologically advanced nation on the planet.  Sherman marvels at the wonders of Krakatoa, but the more time he learns the more he fears that he may never leave the glittering Island paradise.   

Review

The Twenty One Balloons may just be one of the most unique, the most niche novels ever written.  It is so out of the ordinary in almost every way, that it leaves me thinking about it to this day.  The Twenty-One Balloons is written in a somewhat old fashioned, autobiographical style, written from the perspective of Professor Sherman giving a speech about his years on Krakatoa to the people of San Francisco.  The author spends a lot of time detailing the various marvels of Krakatoa, painting a fantastical dream world for the story.  Most interesting are the author’s detailed descriptions of the interesting technological innovations of the Island.  As far as the flow of the story goes, the book is not at all standard, with a plot that starts fast, almost completely halts and then picks up again with a shocking twist at the end.  The characters are somewhat formal but very interesting, but it’s really the setting that clinches it all.  The book is something that might be called a gem; its uniqueness is hard to match.  If you want a fast read this book is not for you, but if you are looking for a book that is alien, odd, something to pique your curiosity, then I would highly recommend The Twenty One Balloons to you.  

  • Ages: 9 – 99
  • Awards: Newbery Medal Winner
  • Pages: 192
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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By Malachi L. Myers