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Summer and Bird

In the world of Down, young sisters Summer and Bird are separated and go in very different directions as they seek their missing parents, try to vanquish the evil Puppeteer, lead the talking birds back to their Green Home, and discover the identity of the true bird queen.

Book  - 2012
J FIC Catmu
1 copy / 0 on hold

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  • ISBN: 0525953469
  • ISBN: 9780525953463
  • Physical Description 344 pages
  • Edition 1st ed.
  • Publisher New York : Dutton Children's Books, [2012]

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Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 0525953469
Summer and Bird
Summer and Bird
by Catmull, Katherine
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Publishers Weekly Review

Summer and Bird

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

After a bewildering day that begins with 12-year-old Summer following the trail of her vanished parents and ends at a bonfire in the forest with Bird, her nine-year-old sister, Summer wakes to find Bird has also abandoned her to follow a path "just for me." There is only the mysterious, elderly Ben for company, along with hints that birds hold the key-sometimes literally-to Summer's questions. Ben's kindhearted but murky guidance (" 'It might mean just exactly that,' said Ben. 'But it might also mean more than that' ") doesn't last long, and then there are no reliable adults, no clear roads to follow as Summer struggles to piece together who she is now that the people who defined her are gone. With a fairy tale-tinged sadness reminiscent of Anne Ursu's Breadcrumbs, Catmull's debut is a melancholy quest fantasy with no trophy at the end; instead, Summer finds the most somber of adult realities. The book's greatest strength lies in Catmull's ability to articulate the disorientation and sense of injustice that accompany loss. Ages 10-up. Agent: David Dunton, Harvey Klinger. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 0525953469
Summer and Bird
Summer and Bird
by Catmull, Katherine
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Kirkus Review

Summer and Bird

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A haunting fable inflected with mythological and fairy-tale motifs finds two sisters abandoned by their parents in conflict with each other. Summer, 12, and Bird, 9, live an idyllic life with their ornithologist father, their mother and their cat. When they wake one morning to find parents and cat gone, there is just an enigmatic "picture letter" from their mother left behind. Into the woods they go to find them, their fright exacerbating the resentments that normally exist between sisters. Bird finds the way into Down, a place of magic, and Summer follows, but soon they are tragically separated, and each must blunder along on her own. Their mother, it turns out, is queen of the birds, in human form since their father stole her swan robe. The evil Puppeteer craves her power, to have bird language and wings, and she cozens Bird into her service, White Witchlike. The girls' physical journeys are metaphors for their emotional ones, the helpers and adversaries they meet as strange and as complicated as their psyches. The author balances this meticulous, symbol-rich narrative with a light, storyteller's voice, posing questions that readers must answer for themselves. At its heart, it is a story of love and imperfection, and of the necessity of embracing both. "The way a story is told has power," the narrator asserts; Catmull's languorously beautiful telling is puissant indeed. (Fantasy. 10-14)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 0525953469
Summer and Bird
Summer and Bird
by Catmull, Katherine
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BookList Review

Summer and Bird

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

*Starred Review* Two sisters awaken in a forest cottage to find their parents gone, the secret inside their closet breached, and nothing but a mysterious pictograph to point them forward. Summer and Bird set out into the woods to reunite their family but soon become separated. Alone, each must brave the forest's hard beauty, exploring its mysterious corners to search for each other, and for themselves. Catmull's stunning debut unleashes a fierce imagination to build a wholly original world, rich with the familiar shimmer of folklore and drawn with the elegance of a Russian ballet. There are rhymes and bird songs; ravens and snakes; a spirit guide with a vexing smile, born of a burning tree; and an evil, bird-eating puppeteer. And what of the avian-selkie Swan Queen, with her stolen cloak of feathers and feet of clay? As a piece of fantasy, this atmospheric adventure thrills with complex storytelling, carefully threaded with bits of foreshadowing and overflowing with poignant imagery. But lurking beneath the girls' parallel journeys and heartbreaking reconciliation is an allegorical exploration of family, where the obscure difficulties and rewards of sibling loyalty and parental devotion become painfully, startlingly clear.--Barthelmess, Thom Copyright 2010 Booklist

Syndetic Solutions - School Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 0525953469
Summer and Bird
Summer and Bird
by Catmull, Katherine
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School Library Journal Review

Summer and Bird

School Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Gr 5-8-Debut author Catmull begins this ambitious fantasy with a powerful first chapter. In spare, poetic terms, an omniscient narrator introduces readers to two sisters, Summer and Bird, who wake up in their home next to a forest to discover that both of their parents and their cat are missing, and they head into the forest to find them. Clues have already alerted readers to the fact that this is a transformation tale: their mother had been a swan in the shape of a human, had found her swan "skin" or robe, and transformed back into her swan form. Summer and Bird are guided by a small bird to Down, a dreamlike place, magical and eerie, full of possibility and danger. The girls are drawn on their different but connected quests to find not only their parents but also their true paths in life, and as they do, they also save the world of birds. The novel has a complex and intricate plot that draws on classic quest fantasy and sibling-rivalry themes, as well as Jungian archetype theory, dream theory, and mythology. Although the story suffers from overexposition, the dream sequences are powerful and intriguing, and the images frequently startle (as in the "endless, dark, wet muscle of the World Snake"). Running through the story is a fascination with birds of all kinds, and an acute ability to get under the skin of characters. Sophisticated readers who enjoy understanding complex motivation and pondering the behavior of characters will enjoy this story.-Sue Giffard, Ethical Culture Fieldston School, New York City (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.