Barkbelly

Cat Weatherill

Language: English

Publisher: Yearling

Published: Jun 9, 2008

Pages: 225
ABC: 2

Description:

One silver-starry night, a shiny, wooden egg falls from a flying machine high in the air . . . down, down, down through the midnight sky . . . down to the small village of Pumbleditch, where Barkbelly is born. Where he’s the only wooden boy. And where he’s the cause of a tragic accident.

Suddenly, Barkbelly’s only choice is to flee for his life—to run. As he tries to escape his haunting past, he faces extraordinary adventures and dangers. Every wooden step leads Barkbelly toward the dark and startling truth about where he comes from and the burning question of where he really belongs. With deliciously imaginative storytelling, Cat Weatherill creates an utterly magical world—and one wooden boy who’s sure to melt readers’ hearts.

From the Hardcover edition.

From School Library Journal

Grade 2-5–Barkbelly is a boy made of wood, mysteriously hatched from an egg and adopted by a childless couple. Their village is located in a world much like the ones found in European folktales, with a few magical features such as giant hedgehogs with magical spines and the wooden people to whom Barkbelly belongs. When he accidentally kills a younger playmate, he runs away, sure that the villagers will turn on him. Barkbelly has adventures in an industrial city, on the road with a circus, and on a pirate ship. When he discovers that he is not unique, but a member of a group of wooden people, he goes searching for his own birth family, a search with unexpected and unhappy results. The resolution seems convenient rather than convincing. Weatherill is a performance storyteller, and there is an oral storytelling feel to the characters and their reactions, as well as to the circularity of the plot. This does not translate wholly successfully to the longer chapter-book format, and independent readers might find the characters rather one-dimensional.–Sue Giffard, Ethical Culture Fieldston School, New York City
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From Booklist

Gr. 4-7. A wooden egg falls from the sky and wallops a farmer in the field, who gives the egg to his wife as a memento. One cold winter, the egg is tossed on the fire to add needed heat--but instead of burning, it shudders and heaves, cracking open to reveal a small wooden baby. That baby, named Barkbelly by his astonished yet loving parents, grows into a sturdy, wooden boy. Although different from other children, Barkbelly enjoys his life in the village, until the day his hard, strong body collides with another little boy and accidentally kills him. He flees in panic, then conducts a wild and imaginative search for his identity and real family. Cleverly written and rich in character and detail, this quirky fantasy will be popular with many middle-grade readers, who will connect with its themes of differences, personal values, relationships, and consequences. Sample illustrations show moody, full-page images that suit the novel's fablelike sensibility. Holly Koelling
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved