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Tin man

Madson, Justin. (Author).

A YA graphic novel about unlikely friends--a tin man seeking a heart and a high schooler trying to come to terms with the death of her grandmother In Justin Madson's debut graphic novel, Tin Man , a girl and her brother befriend the titular Tin Man with unexpected results. Solar is in her last year of high school and is reeling from the recent death of her grandmother. She has abandoned her plans for the future and fallen in with a bad crowd. Her little brother, Fenn, doesn't understand why she's changed--she doesn't even want to help him build their rocket in the garage anymore. Campbell is a tin woodsman--a clunky metal man whose sole purpose in life is to chop down trees. He longs for more, however, and decides to seek out a heart, believing that, with one, he will be able to feel things he has never felt before and, therefore, change his life.

Book  - 2022
GN FIC Madso
1 copy / 0 on hold

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Location
Community Centre Available
  • ISBN: 9781419751059
  • Physical Description 219 pages : chiefly color illustrations ; 23 cm
  • Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], 2022.

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - The Horn Book Review for ISBN Number 9781419751059
Tin Man
Tin Man
by Madson, Justin
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The Horn Book Review

Tin Man

The Horn Book


(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

This Wonderful Wizard of Oz-inspired graphic novel creatively explores growing up, loneliness, and loss. Fenn, a boy obsessed with space, finds and brings home the titular Tin Man, whose name is Campbell, after scavenging the local junkyard for scrap metal. The unusual pair becomes friends, but that relationship is overshadowed by the behavior of Fenn's teen sister, Solar. Formerly studious, Solar has started cutting school and hanging out with a band of slackers, including her possessive boyfriend, Merrick. The bright, angular illustrations emphasize the isolation and yearning felt by the three protagonists as they weather small-town life (which is pretty gloomy, despite several Oz references). Madson creates a rich backstory for Campbell, explaining why he wants a mechanical heart and the circumstances around his decades-long junkyard abandonment. Likewise, readers come to understand Solar's rebellious behavior, which is rooted in her desire to figure out who she really is in the wake of her beloved grandmother's death. Everything comes to a head with the obligatory tornado; what will resonate with readers most is the story's emotional arc. Michelle Lee July/August 2022 p.129(c) Copyright 2022. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9781419751059
Tin Man
Tin Man
by Madson, Justin
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Kirkus Review

Tin Man

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A melancholy tin woodsman and a troubled teenager help each other through bad patches in this debut graphic novel. Expanding on a self-published comic released in 2017, Madson connects Solar, who has abandoned both engineering college plans and the spacecraft she was helping her little brother, Fenn, build in the garage to hang out with sociopathic boyfriend Merrick, and funnel-topped Campbell. Campbell is struggling to understand what feelings are all about ever since he left the Tin Forest to get his clockwork heart. Adolescent readers confronting life-altering changes and decisions of their own will have no trouble identifying with Solar and Campbell, who, even when surrounded by others, look lonely and introspective in the precisely drawn, palely hued art. Initially drawn together by their fondness for Fenn, whose hurt and sense of being betrayed by his once-idolized sister haven't stopped him from working enthusiastically on the rocket, the two become fast friends united by a mutual loss of certainty about what life has to offer them. But along with including among his various borrowings from the Wizard of Oz books a massive climatic whirlwind for drama, the author casts sneering, violent Merrick as such a thoroughly rotten apple that Solar's eventual breakaway comes as an easy choice that points the way (Oz-like) to a tidy, happy ending. Nearly all the lanky human figures in the atmospherically wintry settings read as White. There's plenty of heart, and not just the mechanical kind, in this spare, sensitive friendship tale. (Graphic fantasy. 12-15) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.