Particularize Books To The Wind Boy
Original Title: | The Wind Boy |
ISBN: | 0961596155 (ISBN13: 9780961596156) |
Edition Language: | English |
Ethel Cook Eliot
Hardcover | Pages: 237 pages Rating: 4.18 | 325 Users | 34 Reviews
Mention Out Of Books The Wind Boy
Title | : | The Wind Boy |
Author | : | Ethel Cook Eliot |
Book Format | : | Hardcover |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 237 pages |
Published | : | December 1st 1996 by Raven Rocks Press (first published 1923) |
Categories | : | Fantasy. Childrens. Fiction |
Ilustration Conducive To Books The Wind Boy
This was one of my childhood books. My mom read it to me, and we also had a cassette tape that I'd listen to over and over again, under blankets on the couch on rainy days. I wanted to curl up inside the book, imagining myself playing with Kay and Gentian, the nine- and eight-year old protagonists. I'd re-read the book when I was older, nine or ten, finishing the whole book in an afternoon and carrying the story in the front of my mind for days. Reading it again at a high-school-age, I love The Wind Boy as much as I did then.The story focuses on Gentian and Kay, two refugee children, and their family. Their mother Detra has a day job in a factory, but by night she becomes an artist as skilled as the "Great Artist" living next door. Detra is sculpting a young boy with wings, a Wind Boy, but his expression is always a little too sad. Her family is also suffering: Kay and Gentian's father is absent from most of the story, Detra is struggling to support herself and her children on factory wages, and Kay and Gentian are having difficulty settling into their new home.
It all becomes less worrying when Nan, a young girl from the mountains, arrives to answer Detra's advertisement for "a girl for general housework". Nan is quite simple, but has an air of serene clarity about her that distinguishes her from others in the small village. She relieves Detra of household duties, but also brings the children into a magical place called the Clear Land, which partially mirrors the real world. The Clear Land is a place where one can be "deep-still", where everyone is kind, and where the air can literally be climbed--if one's mind is clear enough. Kay and Gentian buy sandals from a man in the Clear Land, who measures them by looking into their eyes and finds that their minds are quite clear.
The children also discover a Wind Boy in the shoe store: He is a living boy identical to their mother's small statue, blonde-haired with purple wings and eyes "somehow...touched with sadness". The Wind Boy is quickly best of friends with the children, but he cannot play with them in the Clear Land. He tells them that, for fun, he made a mask out of leaves and grass. A small boy saw him in it and was frightened, and the Wind Boy threw the mask away in remorse. Someone has picked it up, though, and is wearing it to scare other village children. The Wind Boy cannot play in the Clear Land until the mask is destroyed, and so he and Gentian and Kay watch for the "Masker" every night, hoping to catch it.
The Wind Boy is a mild, lovely story appropriate for the average seven-year-old and more mature younger readers. It can offer older teens and adults a thoughtful window back into childhood, and though it was first published in 1923, is still relevant to questions of innocence and reality. Eliot's writing is simple but beautiful, containing effortlessly vivid imagery and completely natural dialogue. The plot, while not suspenseful or thrilling, is engaging, and will gently draw the reader back and back again.
Other things I like about this book:
The illustrations. In the 1996 paperback edition, there are beautiful pen-and-ink drawings that perfectly capture the author's depiction of the characters.
How the Clear Land is similar to, but purer than, reality. There is a school, a Great Artist, and a Wind Boy, but they are all brighter and kinder than in "real" life.
Nan's nightgown: A feather-light dress covered with stars that seems to be made out of night sky. In it, the wearer can travel the universe while sleeping.
The audio cassette (click here for CD version), read by Lorrie Holt, is quaint and soft, matching the tone of the writing.
Rating Out Of Books The Wind Boy
Ratings: 4.18 From 325 Users | 34 ReviewsCommentary Out Of Books The Wind Boy
rating: 3.5As a child, I might have given this four stars, but there's a little too much fantasy here for my taste. I'm sure that every child who reads this hopes Nan will come to live with them. There's a strong emphasis here on what it means to be a good person; the truly good people are happier than their peers. I'm sure that some readers will scoff at the good children*, but there's a place for books like this and I hope all children will find at least one that they want to read over andThis was the cutest book ever! I don't believe I have ever read a more colorful book. I could feel the colors the author wrote about deep inside of me. So magical, and well written. I don't think this book gets enough credit, and I wish I had had the opportunity to read it as a young girl. I finished it this morning and started reading it with my 2 sons tonight because I think all children would be intranced with the magic as I was. A beautiful read.
This is a lovely book that I'd never heard of. It's old-fashioned but not hard for contemporary children to understand, is very sweet but never cloying, and my boys and I all really enjoyed it. The story is very simple--a young woman from the mountains (Nan) comes to live and work for a family of refugees and brings magic and change into their lives. The family has moved to this village to escape war and have lost contact with the father of the family who was fighting in the war. The mother is
The Wind Boy is another one of those books that I remember toting around everywhere in the summer when I was seven or eight, reading it slowly but surely, entranced by the magic of it. Like all fantasy books, it's characters have wings and can fly to magical lands, but this one takes the magic to a new level. The imagery and color in the language from this book I remember appreciating even the first time I read it, and I never paid much attention to language when reading when I was younger. It's
My favorite book as a child. I don't remember it, and haven't read it since, as I don't want overwrite my childhood associations with it. It's was pretty much the best book ever.
I bought this wonderful dream of a book years ago and it remains a favorite that I love to dip into. The cover alone is worth the price of the book. Two children and their mother are separated from the husband/father by war (no details given on what war or where though the story has a lovely European feel to it) and have to move. When they do, the newcomers find a magical world and a special friend in the Wing Boy. There is so much to this book, so much love, gentleness, comfort, so much color
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