FICTION

The Hero of Little Street

illus. by author. unpaged. CIP. Roaring Brook/A Neal Porter Bk. Mar. 2012. Tr $17.99. ISBN 978-0-59643-729-6. LC 2010042371.
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RedReviewStarK-Gr 3—Rogers's third wordless book features the young hero from The Boy, the Bear, the Baron, the Bard (Roaring Brook, 2004). His first escapade occurs in modern-day London near the National Gallery. It involves a soccer ball, a fountain, and a flight from bullies. Fans of the previous titles will recognize familiar characters cleverly incorporated into the art when the protagonist seeks refuge inside the museum. Befriended by the dog in Van Eyck's Arnolfini Wedding Portrait, the youngster follows him into Vermeer's A Lady Seated at a Virginal. After enjoying a musical interlude and a gift that later proves useful back in the real world, the twosome exit into Vermeer's The Little Street, ultimately encountering a canine-caging butcher in 17th-century Holland. Rogers's visual narrative is both an aesthetic treat and masterful storytelling. Small panels with minimal detail, often on white, focus the eye on motivations, causes, and sequential action. Larger frames, full-page bleeds, and a single, glorious spread generally show consequences—a slowing of activity, allowing viewers to take in the Old World charm of the majestic halls, paintings, and Delft cityscapes—all rendered in watercolor and ink and shown from varying perspectives. The scenes are frequently humorous, as when all of the rescued dogs crowd around the virginal. This rare combination of action-packed fun and fine art yields new discoveries with each reading and is sure to create fond memories for future students of Art 101.—Wendy Lukehart, Washington DC Public Library
Visiting London's National Gallery, Rogers's bulb-headed boy (The Boy, the Bear, the Baron, the Bard) and the dog from Jan van Eyck's The Arnolfini Marriage time travel to seventeenth-century Delft where they end up in Vermeer's The Little Street. The sequential art in this superb, witty wordless book features fast-paced action.
The same bulb-headed boy who was chased through Elizabethan London in The Boy, the Bear, the Baron, the Bard (rev. 11/04) is time-traveling again, this time to seventeenth-century Delft, an important center of the Dutch art world. As with the earlier wordless book, this one involves a lot of childlike mischief and chasing. When the boy runs into the National Gallery in London to escape some bullies, he encounters Jan van Eyck's masterpiece The Arnolfini Marriage. The dog in the painting jumps out of the frame, and he and the boy romp through the gallery until they find a piece of sheet music on the floor misplaced by Vermeer's Lady Seated at a Virginal. Dog and boy enter into her painting to return the music then head out her door onto Vermeer's The Little Street in Delft. A spirited chase takes them back to the Lady's house, then back to the National Gallery. Fast-paced action in the sequential art will inspire readers to rush through the story, but there's a lot that warrants a return trip at a more leisurely pace. The particulars of seventeenth-century Dutch town life, for example, recall some of Anno's early wordless books in their level of meticulous detail, and astute fans of Rogers's previous book will find humorous references to the bear, the baron, and the bard. A superb, witty book that will appeal both to squirmy, clueless kids and educated art connoisseurs. kathleen t. horning

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