Common Sense Review
Reviewed By: Matt Berman
Eric Rohmann has made other bizarre and appealing picture books, but this is the work of a master at his best. The dreamlike story begins on the title spread, but it's not until the tenth page that the words begin.
The brief, rhyming text, with rhythms that are more complex than usual for this type of picture book, is lovely and lyrical in a way that will appeal to older children and adults, but that younger children will respond to as well. The two-page borderless paintings are luminous and exciting, and tell the tale in a way that complements the text.
The voyage over the sea shimmers in blues and greens, the desert island, in warm browns and yellows--and then the night comes, a riot of cool colors set against the small warmth of the island and the cats. Children will enjoy noticing the small details--the way the islands in the distance look like sleeping cats, and the way some of the roots and snakes at the base of the trees look suspiciously like feline tails.
Together, pictures and text create a story at once beautiful and thrilling, a feast of sight and sound, a moment of pure enchantment.
Another Rohmann picture book is Time Flies. For other dream journeys, try Penguin Dreams or Where the Wild Things Are. A sailboat also flies in The Wreck of the Zephyr.
Plot Summary:
A boy travels by flying sailboat to an island, where he and some giant cats conjur the creatures of the sea into a swirling moonlit dance in the air. Though oddly ignored by the major awards, this spectacular book enchants all who read or hear it.
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