Snapdragon

Snapdragon
افزودن به بوکمارک اشتراک گذاری 0 دیدگاه کاربران 5 (1)

مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
iran گزارش تخلف

فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2020

Lexile Score

210

Reading Level

0-2

ATOS

2.4

Interest Level

4-8(MG)

نویسنده

Kat Leyh

ناشر

First Second

شابک

9781250776341
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
اسنپ دراگون کت لیه (به انگلیسی: Kat Leye's Snapdragon) یک رمان گرافیکی رئالیست جادویی است که دربارهٔ دختری است که با جادوگر شهرش دوست میشود و جادوی عجیب درون خود را کشف میکند. شهر اسنپ یه جادوگر داشت حداقل، شایعات اینطوری پیش میره اما در واقع، جک فقط یک پیرزن با لباس های نتراشیده است که در اینترنت می فروشد و اسکلت ها را بعد از انجام یک مراسم کوچک برای استراحت می فروشد. این وحشتناکه، البته، ولی اسنپ هم فکر میکنه یه جورایی باحاله انها با هم معامله می کنند: جک به اسنپ یاد خواهد داد که چگونه از اپلوزهایی که اسنپ نجات داد مراقبت کند و اسنپ به جک کمک خواهد کرد تا کارش را انجام دهد. اما وقتی اسنپ شروع به شناختن جک میکند، او متوجه میشود که جک در واقع ممکن است جادوی واقعی داشته باشد و با گذشته خانواده اسنپ ارتباط داشته باشد.

نقد و بررسی

Publisher's Weekly

Starred review from November 25, 2019
When middle schooler Snapdragon’s dog goes missing, Snapdragon dares to enter the house of a reputed witch and finds the hound recuperating from an accident. The next day, encountering a dead opossum mother and her living babies, Snapdragon takes them back to the house for help. The purported witch, an older woman named Jacks who raced motorcycles in her youth, makes a deal with Snapdragon—Jacks will help Snapdragon care for the possums if Snapdragon helps Jacks with her work harvesting road kill, then cleaning and selling the articulated skeletons online. As the self-possessed girl develops an interest in vertebrate anatomy, she spends time in her trailer park home evolving a meaningful friendship with trans neighbor Lu, honing an interest in frightening tales, and navigating the fallout of her hardworking single mother’s most recent relationship. She also discovers that Jacks is deeply connected to her own family—and just might be an actual witch. In bright, dynamic art, Leyh packs Snapdragon’s world with an array of wonderful characters, full of quirks and contradictions, who represent a variety of ethnicities, sexualities, and gender expressions. Full of magic and humor, this intersectional, layered tale offers joyful and affirming depictions of social outsiders and comfortably complicated families. Ages 10–14. (Feb.)



School Library Journal

January 10, 2020

Gr 5-8-"She fed her eye to the devil. She eats roadkill and casts spells with her bones." Middle school student Snapdragon has heard the rumors about the so-called witch who lives in her town, and when Snap's dog disappears, she goes to the witch's house, assuming the worst. But she finds only a quiet old woman, Jacks, who was nursing the dog back to health after an accident. Jacks spends her days burying animals and reassembling their skeletons, both to sell to collectors and to preserve the memory of their living days. As Snap gets to know Jacks, she slowly unravels a family secret...and realizes that maybe there is a witch in town after all. Leyh draws from her experience working on the "Lumberjanes" series to craft a work that centers inclusion and acceptance. Snap learns that often those who buck societal convention are marginalized, and her detailed, sprawling world includes several queer women of color, alongside parental figures who understand and nurture their children. Leyh makes bold choices with her cartoonish artwork; while many artists might have opted for a more somber aesthetic to depict this occasionally unsettling narrative, Leyh's anime-esque panel structure and imagery keep the content light and engaging even as the text grapples with the complexity of identity, family, and friendship. VERDICT This sensitive, slightly spooky tale will spur middle graders to mull the importance of fostering welcoming communities.-Matisse Mozer, Los Angeles Public Library

Copyright 2020 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Kirkus

Starred review from December 15, 2019
Lumberjanes comic books collaborator Leyh expertly blends fantasy and realism in her energetic debut solo middle-grade graphic novel. "Our town has a witch. She fed her eye to the devil. She eats roadkill and casts spells with the bones." Snapdragon knows the rumors, but after the "roadkill witch" rescues Snap's beloved dog and agrees to foster abandoned possum babies, Snap starts to think all may not be as it seems. And it's true: The town's "witch" is actually Crocs-wearing, white-haired, one-eyed Jacks. Gruff but nurturing, Jacks takes Snap under her wing, teaching Snap her work of using bones from roadkill to build and sell anatomically correct skeletal systems. But it also turns out that Jacks is a witch, using magic to release the souls of roadkill back into nature, and Snap is desperate to find out if she can also channel magic. Leyh's characters are fully realized, from Snap's simultaneously overflowing skepticism and enthusiasm to her dynamic with her single working-while-in-school mom, from Jacks' quiet history with Snap's grandma to Snap's new best friend's transition to wearing skirts, loving nail polish, and being called Lulu. Their world isn't perfect: Snap and Lulu are bullied at school, economic struggles are apparent, and Snap's mom's abusive ex-boyfriend shows up more than once (including in a finale that has a twinge of deus ex machina). Jacks is white while Snap, her family, Lulu, and most secondary characters are coded as black--all, refreshingly, presenting with a realistic variety of skin tones and hair colors and textures. Sweet and fierce, this is a must-have. (Graphic fantasy. 8-14)

COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.



Booklist

Starred review from February 15, 2020
Grades 4-7 *Starred Review* There's something creepy about Jacks, the odd, gangly, one-eyed old white woman living in Snapdragon's town, but Snap's not afraid, especially after Jacks shows her how to take care of a litter of orphaned possums and what she's up to early in the morning with a wheelbarrow full of roadkill (it involves a very lucrative internet business for skeleton enthusiasts). Beyond their shared obsession with animals, though, Snap and Jacks have a much deeper connection based on family secrets, ghosts, and a touch of magic. The slow reveal of those connections makes up the dense but heartening plot of Leyh's graphic novel, which is bolstered by some affirming, character-revealing side-plots, such as Snap's growing friendship with transgender, dark-skinned Lulu; her fantastic relationship with her tough yet deeply compassionate Black mother; and her impatience to become more powerful herself. Leyh's dynamic artwork, full of active motion, shifting perspectives, and varying panel shapes and sizes, matches the complexity of the plot, and her figure designs, which show a wide variety of gender presentations, body shapes, skin tones, and hair types, nicely complement her characters' personalities. Beyond the magic, creepy undertones, and captivating artwork, themes of acceptance, particularly regarding gender and sexuality, permeate the story and are handled in a refreshing, matter-of-fact manner. This endearingly offbeat story emphasizes found community, the importance of love and friendship, and a fierce commitment to individuality?all powerful themes for middle-grade readers.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)




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