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* Children's Crown Award ¼ö»óµµ¼
* A Child Magazine Best Book of the Year
* IRA Notable Books for a Global Society
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* SCCLCYP Award ¼ö»óµµ¼
* Society of School Librarians International (SSLI) Honor Book
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Edition: Paperback: 32 pages
ISBN-10: 0152053808
ISBN-13: 978-0152053802
Ã¥ Å©±â : 27.9cm x 22.8cm
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Book Description
After his home is destroyed by war, eight-year-old Viktor finds hope in the survival of two very special fish.
Publishers Weekly
Sylvada's (A Symphony of Whales) eerie autumnal oil paintings provide the emotional backdrop for another Bunting tale of a family forced into exile (So Far from the Sea). After Papa leaves to join the underground in his war-torn country, life for the eight-year-old narrator, Viktor, his five-year-old sister, Marina, and their mother grows increasingly grim. "Every day we heard distant gunshots and saw smoke rise into faraway skies," while strangers fleeing the conflict share terrible stories. The only bright spot is the pair of goldfish one refugee leaves behind. Marina names them Gleam and Glow and dotes on them. But when the threesome finally departs for the border, they must leave the fish behind, so Viktor releases them into the family's pond. After a long stay in a refugee camp and a tearful reunion with their father, the family returns to find their home devastated but the pond full of fish, "as shimmery and dazzling as melted gold." This image of hope and renewal strikes a strong keynote in Bunting's bittersweet story (inspired by true events in the Balkans, she explains in an afterword). The narrative brims with poetic similes while Sylvada's thick brush strokes and somber palette produce images that are at once stark and dreamlike. The artwork reveals the bleakness of both landscape and emotions in a time of war.
Children's Literature
The story is all too familiar, unless you haven't been reading the papers or watching television news. A family hastens to escape their war-torn county, but before leaving, an older man leaves his fish bowl with the family. Little Marina names the fish Gleam and Glow, and her brother Viktor places the two beautiful goldfish in their pond in the hope that they may live a day or two more. The family escapes to the safety of a refugee camp and when the war ends, they return home. Sadly, it is only to find that all is destroyed, except that the beautiful fish have multiplied and filled the pond with shades of gold—adding some joy to their return home. As Eve Bunting remarked in one presentation "the saddest wars are civil wars." This story is sad but it ends on a bright note, and the closing picture is filled with the golden glow of the fish. The beautiful endpapers and cream-colored pages are a perfect complement as are the paintings by Sylvada, which early on are filled with dark colors to reflect the bleakness of war and then brighten as the people return home. This is a picture book that will also appeal to older readers.
School Library Journal
With her noted skill in presenting difficult topics with clarity and sensitivity, Bunting has written an inspiring story based on the true experience of a Bosnian family forced to flee their country during the recent civil war. Eight-year-old Viktor watches as his father walks away to join the Liberation Army, and knows that soon he, his mother, and younger sister, Marina, will be forced to leave their home, just one step ahead of the approaching enemy forces. Already, strangers pass through Viktor's town on their way to the border. One man leaves his two golden fish with the family, explaining that, "An extra day or two of life is as important to a fish as it is to us." But just a few days later, as they ready themselves to depart, Viktor releases the fish into their pond. After days of walking and weeks of living in a refugee camp, the boy and his mother and sister share a glorious reunion with Papa and eventually return home. The land is ravaged by war and their home is destroyed but the fish have survived, even thrived-they and their offspring fill the pond. The simple, elegant language is at once moving and eloquent when juxtaposed with Sylvada's expressive oil paintings. The artist's palette of rich earth tones and striking brushwork reflect the strong emotional tenor of the story. Focusing on the fearsome impact of war upon families and children, and on those things that allow people to retain their humanity, this book deserves to be introduced and discussed.
Child Magazine
Inspired by a real incident from the Bosnian war, this haunting story tells of a refugee family's flight, the pair of goldfish the kids leave behind, and the surprise that awaits when they return. Compassionate, sobering, hopeful, and wise, the tale is played out against the bittersweet backdrop of rich, luminous oil paintings.
Kirkus Reviews
In this aptly titled, lovely effort from Bunting (We Were There, below, etc.), humanity simply shines through. The work is all the more luminous for its basis in actual events. Set against the turmoil of the Bosnian war, it concerns a family left bereft by the absence of the patriarch, who has gone off to fight with the underground. One day, a man fleeing his village stops at the family's home and leaves a bowl containing two goldfish with the children. Despite the fact that the mother knows that her own family will have to depart soon, she gives in to her children's pleas and allows them to keep the fish. Named Gleam and Glow, they literally and figuratively serve as the only bright spots in this bleak existence. The night before the family leaves, eight-year-old Viktor slips the fish into the pond on their property. Now all the family can think about is their safety and a hoped-for reunion with Papa, who eventually locates his wife and youngsters in a refugee camp. Many months pass before villagers can return to their homes. Sadly, houses and towns have been ravaged in the meantime, but this family discovers to its astonishment that life, if only in a small way, has transcended the horrors of war: Gleam and Glow have miraculously survived and multiplied many times over. Sylvada's (A Symphony of Whales, 1999, etc.) oil paintings are dramatic and energetic. An author's note recounts the true story that inspired the tale. Though characters' names place them in an Eastern European milieu, this is a universal story that testifies to life rising from the ashes. |
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