The Midnight Zoo

The Midnight Zoo
افزودن به بوکمارک اشتراک گذاری 0 دیدگاه کاربران 4 (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.
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فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2011

Lexile Score

990

Reading Level

5-7

ATOS

6.3

Interest Level

6-12(MG+)

نویسنده

Andrea Offermann

ناشر

Candlewick Press

شابک

9780763656324
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
استاد قصه گو سونیا هارتنت یک جادوی و حرکت پذیر در مورد جنگ و رستگاری است. . و ازادی یعنی چی. وقتی المانی‌ها به اردوگاه رومانی در طول جنگ جهانی دوم حمله می‌کنند، اندری و برادر کوچکترش توماس از یک روستای ویران در زیر پوشش تاریکی فرار می‌کنند و از یک بسته مخفی محافظت می‌کنند. این سفر منجر به یک شهر بمب گذاری شده می شود، جایی که پسران به یک شگفتی پنهان دست می یابند: باغ وحش پر از مخلوقات محتاج امید. مانند اندرج و توماس، حیوانات گرگ و عقاب، میمون و خرس، شیر و مهر، کانگورو و لاما داستان‌هایی دارند که باید به اشتراک بگذارند و ماموریتی برای بازپس گرفتن زندگی‌شان داشته باشند.

نقد و بررسی

Publisher's Weekly

Starred review from August 8, 2011
This somber yet not hopeless fable set during WWII offers a haunting portrait of families, human and otherwise, torn apart. Two Romany boys, 12-year-old Andrej and nine-year-old Tomas, flee with their infant sister after German soldiers arrest their relatives, discovering a bombed-out town with an intact zoo. Lindgren Award–winner Hartnett (Butterfly) combines powerful prose with magical realism to heighten this setting and develop the personalities of the animals that the boys meet, who begin to speak after another round of bombing. The group—including a silent eagle, a mischievous monkey, a lioness whose family has been taking from her, and a seal stolen from its mother as a pup—spend a charged night sharing stories. Offermann’s (The Boneshaker) delicate b&w drawings introduce each chapter. Hartnett doesn’t minimize the horrors the boys have seen, making a profound case for the futility of war while exploring questions about responsibility and freedom. “You are a mysterious animal, you know,” the bear tells the brothers. “A bear does what a bear must do to keep itself alive. But a man does many things that he has no need to do.” Ages 10–up.



School Library Journal

September 1, 2011

Gr 5-8-Brothers Andrej, 12, and Tomas, 9, are wandering a war-ravaged countryside after their Romany encampment was attacked by German soldiers. Carrying their infant sister in a pack, they've been scavenging for weeks when they stumble upon an abandoned zoo curiously unharmed in a town utterly destroyed by bombing. The animals are hungry, thirsty, and frightened in their cages, but willing to share their stories with the children. War as seen through the eyes of innocent children is brutal, but the judgment of these animals on man for the horror of war and the iron bars keeping them from their rightful place in the world is heartbreaking. Despite seeing two members of his caravan brutally killed and his extended family marched off by soldiers and told to bring shovels, Andrej clings to the hope of finding his parents. The naivete of children will allow hope in this story even though the circumstances of the lost children and caged animals offer little reason for it. The hungry, footsore youngsters share their food with the animals and, through their own storytelling, create an escape that brings freedom to all of them. The language is spare and poignant; each animal has a story and a distinct voice, ranging from tragic to menacing to sadly comic. The setting of Europe during World War II is revealed through tiny historical details woven seamlessly into the story, but the lack of precise place names and dates gives the novel a timeless quality. This beautiful and sad book will stay with readers long after the story is done.-Caroline Tesauro, Radford Public Library, VA

Copyright 2011 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Kirkus

July 15, 2011

In a bombed town, two gypsy boys discover a zoo where abandoned animals teach them the meaning of freedom amid war's chaos.

After witnessing their Romany caravan, including their parents and uncle, callously demolished by soldiers two months earlier, 12-year-old Andrej and his 9-year-old brother Tomas flee with their baby sister into what seems to be the European countryside of World War II. Trusting no one, they travel by night to avoid soldiers and civilians who hate them because they are Roms and "different." Even though "fear beat inside Andrej like a dark, angry bird," he tries to appear "calm and undaunted for Tomas, as if the precarious life they lived was unexceptional, and held no terrors at all." When the boys find a mysterious zoo with a talking lioness, bear, wolf, chamois, eagle, boar, seal, llama, monkey and kangaroo, they share their meager food and stories with these fellow war victims. Helplessly trapped, the animals long for freedom but fear the unknown as Andrej tries to release them. Written in lyrical, spare prose, the plot encompasses a single night in which doomed animals and brave boys cling to hope in a world that makes no sense. Black-and-white spot art highlights animals and key scenes.

An evocative story about unusual war victims whose enduring belief in goodness brings true freedom. (Fable. 10 & up)

(COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)



Booklist

August 1, 2011
Grades 5-8 Andrej and Tomas are the only survivors, along with their infant sister, of a German attack on their Romany encampment. Traveling at night, they encounter an abandoned zoo in a bombed-out village. Used to a lifetime of wandering, the boys have a deep appreciation for freedoma freedom that is denied the zoo animals. During a single evening, the animals and children share their stories of war and loss. The animals are so bitter about their confinement that the troubles of war seem almost a secondary concern, while the boys are shell-shocked but focused on survival. The resolution at the end, although stirring in its magic realism, may confuse some readers. Still, this middle-grade fantasy from Printz Honor Book author Hartnett is alternately lyrical and stark, and it manages to combine adventure with a more thoughtful exploration of the nature of freedom and hope. Offermann's beautiful pencil illustrations at the beginning of each chapter evoke the message at the heart of this book, that though cages come and get you, the determination to endure will win out.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)




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