After many years of running this bookblog my life has shifted a bit. I will continue to review books I am reading but will be adding in TV and movie reviews as well. Enjoy! Check out my companion blog: http://dcvegeats.blogspot.com/
Monday, January 25, 2016
"Last Stop on Market Street" by Matt De La Pena, Illustrated by Christian Robinson
Well, the annual awards have to come with some controversy, and a big one this year was the Newbery committee awarding the top honor to a picture book, something they haven't done since A Visit to William Blake's Inn back in the 1980s. Note that the book also picked up Caldecott and Coretta Scott King honors, so clearly, it is well-appreciated by many. So, the question is, do picture books merit an award given purely for literary quality? And if so, does this book meet that literary bar? The answers are ... I'm not sure. Much like a graphic novel, a good picture book must have a kind of symbiosis, a marriage, between the image and the word. Neither should be able to stand alone and the two, together, should create more than the whole. So, yes, the words and pictures are dependent on one another, but can't that be considered a kind of literature? Don't we talk, all the time, about Media Literacy? What is that, if not about understanding something at a deeper level through imagery? Then, there are the words. Does this have the best words ever? No, not in my humble opinion. But they are good. There is a flow and rhythm to this tale, a lyricism, a poetic feel without the poetry. The back and forth between the Grandma and the boy has a rhythm, too, and that rhythm is a big part of why the story "sticks." There is imagery in the words, as well, imagery which is echoed and reinforced by the pictures, slightly evocative of Jacob Lawrence in their simplicity and social commentary. All of this is to say that critics seem to be dismissing this book at face value, but one must look more deeply to see the subtleties that make it a rich tale which the award committees appreciated. Look at the messages within the messages -- the personalities on the bus, the fact that even though this pair has less than others, they still give their time to help those who are worse off. It is America's story. This is a book written by a Hispanic man, illustrated by an African American man, which shows the diversity of life that is typical in the inner city. How could the committees ignore such a tale? If you aren't a fan, look again, and look deeper. This one requires multiple reads to truly see all the layers in a book that is far more than just an easy read.
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