Gr 3—5—This picture book is based on an 1835 scandal created by the New York Sun. To increase sales, the newspaper printed fake articles about bizarre creatures on the moon seen through a newfangled telescope, and newsboys Jake and Charlie hawk the sensational editions on the street. The book chronicles some of the details actually published by the Sun as well as the boys' joy over making more money, their hopefulness that the stories are real, and their descent back to reality when the truth is revealed. The story is too simplistic to pare down to a lesson about the wrongs of lying, and the ramifications of a media source's scheme to make money via false claims are too complicated for young readers to process. The rather gloomy collages of quirky faces, figures, and scenes are interesting, but sophisticated. This story would be useful in an older classroom setting to jump-start a discussion of the very relevant issue of journalistic integrity, but that's a pretty limited demographic to consider.—Alyson Low, Fayetteville Public Library, AR
In 1835, newsboys Jake and Charlie sell lots of New York Sun papers thanks to a story about animals on the moon. (The newspaper truly ran this hoax report.) While adults marvel at the "news," the boys engage in daydreamy dialogues about it. The text can be abstract and wordy, but it's generally engaging. Brown- and sepia-heavy collages establish the gritty milieu.
Historical details immerse readers in the hardscrabble life of nineteenth-century New York City newsboys. Readers learn, for example, that the boys earned thirty-three cents for every hundred papers sold and that their daily total determined whether they spent the night in an alley or a boarding house. The New York Sun’s series on “great astronomical discoveries” counts as one of history’s most imaginative hoaxes. The newspaper populated the moon with sapphire temples, unicorn-goat hybrids, and “moon beavers” that could walk upright and harness the power of fire. Josée Bisaillon’s mixed-media collages relay both the make-do resourcefulness that often accompanies poverty, and the hoax’s pastiche of journalism and science-fiction motifs. An author’s note provides additional information about newsboys, “the Great Moon Hoax,” and the New York Sun (which never got around to printing a retraction).
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