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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Timothee de Fombelle, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. The Past

So I’m back online! And I’ve so much to tell you about…

So yes, I was offline because I was away visiting family in the Netherlands. This is where we were for most of the time:

This is the haul of books I brought back:

My favourite book of all those I brought back is Overzee (literally “Oversea”) by Annemarie van Haeringen, Tonke Dragt, and Sjoerd Kuyper. It’s a collection of three very short, modern myths, each linked by the sea. The first is about a pelican who rescues a boy lost in a storm, the second is about Noah’s ark, unicorns and narwhals, and the third is about the source of the sea – where indeed does it begin? Each story is magical and word perfect. You won’t be able to finish this book without your heart contracting a little at its verbal and visual beauty. I do hope that one day it will be translated into English. The stories are timeless.


On holiday M fell deeply in love with the Belgian comic series Suske and Wiske (variously translated in to English as Bob and Bobette, Wanda and Willy and, most recently Spike and Suzy). This strip was created by Willy Vandersteen and first published in 1945 (there are now over 300 books!). It features two children who get up to all sorts of adventures, some fantasy, some historical, some science fiction, and has a look not dissimilar to the most famous comic from Belgium – Tintin.

Whilst away I read a brilliant Dutch children’s book Crusade in Jea

4 Comments on The Past, last added: 4/16/2012
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2. Toby Alone


By Timothee de Fombelle

Illustrated by Francois Place and translated by Sarah Ardizzone

Candlewick Press, 2009

$17.99, ages 9-12 , 384 pages


Toby Lolness, a nimble boy no taller than a crumb, flees the hatred of his people in this fast-paced Lilliputian adventure set in the branches of an oak tree.


At 7 years old, Toby is exiled with his parents, Maya and Sim, from the top of the Tree to the Low Branches, when Sim, a great scientist, refuses to share an invention that would lead to the destruction of the tree, a black box that converts the Tree's sap into energy.


Sim believes the Tree is alive and a project headed by weevil breeder Joe Mitch to tunnel out its trunk is putting it in peril. He fears his black box would speed up mining of the tree's sap, but to the Tree's council, which is increasingly under Mitch's thumb, Sim's refusal to share his discovery is heresy.


After several years of exile in the Land of Onessa, Maya learns that her mother, Mrs. Alnorell, has died and returns with Sim and Toby to the Treetop at the request of Sim's old friend Zef Clarac, the Treetop lawyer. When they arrive, Zef hands Maya a rare, expensive Tree Stone, which belonged to Mrs. Alnorell. The stone, though it has no powers, is the tree's treasure and would give absolute power to Mitch and his men if they got control over it.


Just as the Lolness family is about to leave for the Low Branches, Mitch and his men ambush them at Zef's house and demand the stone. But thanks to Sim's quick wits, Toby, now 13, is able to slip out of Mitch's clutches with the stone, setting off a terrifying manhunt for Toby through the Tree.


With a bounty on his head and his parents in a dungeon in the Treetop, Toby flees to the Low Branches, and along the way discovers the loyalties of two old friends, is nearly fed to weevils, rescues a friend who has become Mitch's whipping boy, is swarmed by mosquitoes and is betrayed by a family he once trusted.


Eventually Toby makes his way to his dear friend Elisha's house in the Low Branches, where she hides him in a cave, then watches helplessly as he becomes trapped inside by a snow storm. Toby survives until spring, but learns that his parents are going to be executed, and he and Elisha concoct a plan to free them, only to have it backfire and tear their friendship apart.


Hearing that his parents have already been killed and thinking Elisha has betrayed him, Toby is ready to give up on life and as a fire sweeps over the prison he thought his parents were in, he finds himself falling off the Tree into the hands of the feared Grass People, who are believed to be planning an invasion of the Tree.


French playwright de Fombelle creates a fascinating, fun adventure while skillfully weaving in political commentary in this first book in a series translated from French. If your child loved the Littles or the Borrowers, they'll be enthralled by Toby's world and find it hard to wait for the next installment.


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