School Library Journal Mobile
Log In  |  Register          Free Newsletter Subscription
Subscribe to SLJ Magazine
Email
Learn RSS

A Fuse #8 Production   



My Reviews Collected

  • A Fuse #8 Production Reviews
  • A Selection of Kidlit Bloggers I Like

  • Read Roger
  • bookshelves of doom
  • Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast
  • Collecting Children's Books
  • Educating Alice
  • Oz and Ends
  • 100 Scope Notes
  • Shaken & Stirred
  • Jen Robinson's Book Page
  • Children's Illustration
  • ShelfTalker
  • Chasing Ray
  • Kids Lit
  • Finding Wonderland
  • Mother Reader
  • The Excelsior File
  • Book Moot
  • Crooked House
  • Wagging Tales
  • What Adrienne Thinks About That
  • Pink Me
  • A Chair, A Fireplace and A Tea Cozy
  • Chicken Spaghetti
  • Pinot and Prose
  • ALSC Blog
  • Cynsations
  • Planet Esme
  • Interesting Non-Fiction for Kids
  • The Brown Bookshelf
  • Becky's Book Reviews
  • Early Word Kids
  • Children's Writer/Illustrator Blogs

  • The James Preller Blog
  • The Neil Gaiman Blog
  • The Sarah Miller Blog
  • The Longstockings
  • The Sam Riddleburger Blog
  • The Mo Willems Blog
  • The Adam Rex Blog
  • The Blue Rose Girls Blog
  • The Gail Gauthier Blog: Original Content
  • The Mitali Perkins Blog
  • The Lisa Yee Blog
  • The Laini Taylor Blog
  • The Jarrett Krosoczka Blog
  • The Matthew Holm Blog
  • The Melanie Hope Greenberg Blog
  • The Douglas Florian Blog
  • Blogs by Children's Book Editors

  • Editorial Anonymous
  • Mishaps and Adventures
  • Brooklyn Arden
  • bloomabilities
  • Children's Publisher Blogs

  • First Second Books Blog
  • On Our Minds @ Scholastic
  • Unabridged: The Charlesbridge Blog
  • Book Related in Some Way (Maybe)

  • Kidlitosphere Central
  • KidLit Interview Wiki
  • Wiki of Children's Book Reviews
  • GalleyCat
  • Bookninja
  • Paper Cuts
  • Guardian Unlimited: Books
  • Deaf Characters in Adolescent Literature
  • Saints and Spinners
  • LISNews
  • Bildungsroman
  • Jacket Flap
  • AS IF
  • Podcasty Goodness

  • Just One More Book
  • Cynopsis: Kids!
  • PotterCast
  • Recent Posts

    Recent Comments

    Most Commented On

    Archives

    Blog

    Link This | Email this | Blog This | Comments (0)


    Review of the Day - Seven Miles to Freedom: The Robert Smalls Story by Janet Halfmann

    July 7, 2008

    Seven Miles to Freedom: The Robert Smalls Story
    By Janet Halfmann
    Illustrated by Duane Smith
    Lee & Low Books
    40 pages
    $17.95
    ISBN: 978-1-60060-232-0
    Ages 7-11
    On shelves now


    I think that there may be a certain amount of thinking amongst adults like myself that we've plumbed all the heroes we could get out of the Civil War. Not a particular history buff, my vague and foggy sense of the time period (informed at intervals by Ken Burns' Civil War series) is that the heroes have long been lauded, the villains well vilified, and that there's not much else to say to kids about the time. I mean, I watched Glory in high school. I know the time period, right? It's a good thing that there are authors like Janet Halfmann out there who think differently from people like me. A week ago if you had walked up to me and said, "Robert Smalls. Who was he?", I'd have met you with a slow-blinking stare. Now if you walk up to me and say, "Robert Smalls. Who was he?", you're still going to get the stare, but only because I'm probably seated at a reference desk somewhere wracking my brain for context. Seven Miles to Freedom: The Robert Smalls Story takes a relatively unknown hero and renders his story loud, strong, and clear. With illustrations by first-time picture book artist Duane Smith, it's the kind of book with enough innate drama to stick in the minds of its intended audience.

    He was born a slave on a South Carolina plantation in 1839. At the time Robert Smalls was a favorite with his masters, the McKees, and when he was twelve they sent him to work at a hotel in Charleston along the river. From there he worked the cargo docks and then the shipyards, with the potential to someday become a wheelman. After he married, Robert swore he'd buy his wife and daughter's freedom. He had almost managed it by the time the Civil War broke out. So when work dried up, Robert became a deckhand on a steamer called Planter and eventually worked his way up to wheelman. He also observed all the secret steam whistles, a fact that would come in useful later. Robert soon found that he was physically similar to the captain. And so, planning with his crew, Robert determined to disguise himself as the captain one night and smuggle the crew and their families to the north where they would be free. It was risky, dangerous, and even if he managed to escape the South, what would stop the North from firing upon a southern vessel? Halfmann retells this exciting escape and story clearly and concisely. An Afterword offers facts about Robert and his life, including the time when he was elected to Congress in 1875, and a list of Author's Sources provides a plethora of bibliographic information.

    Halfmann's focus could have been anything. When you consider that you're dealing with a man who escaped slavery, wrote the proposal for the creation of South Carolina's first free system of public schools, became a Congressman, and petitioned to give women the right to vote, and more, the question isn't whether to tell his story but how much to tell. Because Halfmann's book is in a picture book style and stands at 40 pages, the storyline had to either summarize everything quickly, or focus in on a single moment in time. As it happens, the story of Smalls' escape and bravery is particularly ideal for a picture book. There's danger and suspense and a clear-cut hero involved. Now all that remains is for someone to write a full-length biography of the man for kids.

    Artist Duane Smith's style did not initially engage me, and I'll tell you why. I'm the kind of person who loves delicate lines and minute details. I love pen-and-inks and tiny images that only can be seen on the fourth or fifth rereading of a book. Impressionism has never done anything for me. Bold strokes of color and thick paints? Not my style. Which isn't to say that I couldn't appreciate what Mr. Smith has done here. Using deep-hued oils in an array of striking colors, Smith renders his people as almost outlines of paint. Shadows and skin, hollows and shady areas are defined by these sweeps and starts of color. At a key moment, say when Robert overhears the officers of the ship say they'll go ashore, Smith makes a point to close in and detail the face of his hero more precisely. There's a method to the madness here. Smith makes calculated choices on when and how to portray the characters in this book. Admittedly, this serves more effectively as a meditative tool. When you are faced with action sequences, like the Planter escaping Confederate waters, the result is not as exciting as you might hope. That said, the battle at Fort Sumter excels. And I enjoyed Smith's varying angles. One moment you're on the same level as the characters, and the next you're seagull height, peering down upon the Planter and the Onward as they approach one another tentatively. Smith appears to be the ideal illustrator for this particular tale.

    So I like the writing and I appreciated the art (even if it's not my preferred choice). It's a pity that the design didn't quite stand up to the rest of the book. Non-fiction (or "informational" if you prefer) picture books suffer from a strict format that does nobody any good. In the most extreme cases you'll open the story up and face a page of text and a picture. A page of text and a picture. A page of text and . . . yawwwwn! "Seven Miles to Freedom" resists this format as much as it can, but it still happens. Sometimes the words will mix and meld with the illustrations, and that's wonderful. But since Smith didn't create an entire book of two-page spreads, something has to be done when there's only picture enough for one page. The result is a fine book, but one that you wish could have upped the oomph just a tad.

    I can't vouch for the rest of the country, but in New York young kids are generally given biography assignments of vague proportions. They'll walk up to your reference desk and say, "I wanna biography," and you have to figure out what they mean exactly. The advantage of the Robert Smalls story is that it's short enough to not freak the kids out too much, but interesting and with lots of bright pictures. I wouldn't necessarily hand it to a fourth or fifth grader, of course, but even if I did I figure they'd get a certain level of enjoyment out of the storyline. Kids will also get historical assignments and certainly the best-known picture book set during the Civil War to my mind is Patricia Polacco's Pink and Say. Seven Miles to Freedom would pair beautifully with that title. A great new take on a little known true-life tale.

    On shelves now.

    By the way, it's Non-Fiction Monday again.  Be sure to stop by Picture Book of the Day for the round-up.


    Posted by Elizabeth Bird on July 7, 2008 | Comments (0)


    Email
    Learn RSS



    POST A COMMENT
    Display Name or Registered Users Login Here.
    Please restrict submissions to less than 7,000 characters (including any HTML formatting).

    Change Image
    Before submitting this form, please type the characters displayed above.
    Note the letters are NOT case sensitive.

    Advertisement

    Advertisements





    ©2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
    All rights reserved.
    Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
    Please visit these other Reed Business sites