Caminar

(Author)
Available

Product Details

Price
$8.99  $8.36
Publisher
Candlewick Press (MA)
Publish Date
Pages
208
Dimensions
5.4 X 0.6 X 8.1 inches | 0.35 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780763690946

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About the Author

Skila Brown has an MFA in writing for children and young adults from Vermont College of Fine Arts. She has visited Guatemala numerous times in the last decade. She lives in Indiana with her husband and their three children.

Reviews

Exquisitely crafted poems are the basis of an unusually fine verse novel set in 1981, in the middle of the Guatemalan Civil War. ... The poems, all written from Carlos's point of view, are emotional, visceral, and lyrical. Layered and varied, some are shape poems; some can be read in more than one way, as if written from two perspectives; and all are accessible to young readers. ... All combine to give us a chillingly memorable portrait of one child surviving violence and loss in a time of war.
--The Horn Book (starred review)

'Caminar' contributes poetry that elevates the genre. ... Readers will encounter a range of imagery, repetition, rhythms, and visual effects that bring to life the psychological experience of Carlos, a young boy caught in the violent clash between the government's army and the people's rebels. ... This is a much-needed addition to Latin American-themed middle grade fiction.
--School Library Journal (starred review)

The Guatemalan Civil War is powerfully fictionalized through the eyes of a young boy on the verge of becoming a man in this debut novel. ... This is a welcome way to increase the diversity of any collection while providing a glimpse into a period of history unknown to most American kids. A glossary of Spanish words is included.
--Booklist

Brown uses concrete poetry to excellent effect, skillfully playing with spacing, structure, and repetition. ... Brown offers some historical context in an opening note and a Q&A (a glossary of Spanish words is also included), but the ambiguities and uncertainties within the story itself help align readers with Carlos and his fellow villagers, caught in a conflict they don't understand.
--Publishers Weekly

The free-verse poetry in this verse novel is tightly crafted to evoke Carlos' confusion and emotional turmoil both prior to and after the massacre, employing both shape and resonant language to pull readers into his hesitations, sadness, and terror. ... The accessible imagery in the poetry will engage readers on a visceral level, ably communicating the limitations of Carlos' understanding, both in terms of his youth and his inability to comprehend the full scope of the conflict.
--Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books

Part historical novel, part concrete poem, this debut work artfully explores the journey of this young man. ... Brown uses concrete poetic form effectively to record Carlos' journey.
--Library Media Connection

Brown's sparse story ... would be a solid choice for a teen poetry or world conflict school unit. The free-verse format makes it a quick read, and ... Brown's poetry ... shares rich details, like the sounds of helicopter blades or the feel of marbles in Carlos's hand. Brown conveys the fear and violence of Carlos's experiences without overwhelming readers, making it appropriate for most middle schoolers.
--VOYA

A beautifully wrought, delicately written novel that makes the unthinkable palatable to the young.
--A Fuse #8 Production