Cub’s Journey Home by G. Graham
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.20361/G2002DAbstract
Graham, Georgia. Cub’s Journey Home. Markham, ON: Red Deer Press, 2015. Print.
Georgia Graham is a fine artist, but as a writer, needs a good editor. Like her earlier work Where Wild Horses Run, this is a beautifully illustrated book. Graham’s landscapes, trees, rivers, rocks, bears and flowers are all highly realistic. She tackles a variety of environments including snow, running water, forest fire, a burnt landscape and a garbage dump. Many of the images are frame-worthy. There are flaws in the flames of her forest fire, some of which look like they belong on racing cars; however, in the next image, she absolutely captures the complexity of the fire reflected on swamp water.
Unfortunately, the text is an amalgamation of strange images and unusual or extravagant word choices. Why, for example, is a baby bear growing inside the mother called a “speck”? There is so much purple prose that the reader is constantly distracted. There are “long needles of sunlight” that “stab”. The snow covering the den is “a curtain of lacy ice”. “A breeze runs its icy fingers through his fur.” The cub “skedaddles”. “A dark blanket [of smoke] rises up and steals the stars from the sky.” The whole text would have been much better if Graham had just written in her natural voice, as she occasionally does, to good effect.
While the unusual word choices make the reading level of the text much too advanced for a picture book, the images, with their excellent rendering of Alberta landscapes, make it valuable. This book is recommended with reservations for elementary school libraries and public libraries.
Recommended with reservations: 2 out of 4 stars
Reviewer: Sandy Campbell
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