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The School Story by Brian Selznick
The School Story by Brian Selznick











The School Story by Brian Selznick

Uncle Albert’s house is like nothing Joseph has ever seen. In 1990 Joseph Jervis runs away from his boarding school to the home of an estranged uncle he has never met. Alone in the world and looking to start over Billy finds himself drawn to a London theater beginning a dynasty of actors and theater performers that will span five generations. The story starts in 1776 with Billy Marvel, the only survivor of a shipwreck. *An advance copy of this title was provided by the publisher for review consideration* Possible Pairings: Midwinterblood by Marcus Sedgwick, The Mysteries of Harris Burdick by Chris Van Allsburg, The Chronicles of Harris Burdick: Fourteen Amazing Authors Tell the Tales by Chris Van Allsburg et al Kaleidoscope is a meditative and ultimately hopeful book, ideal for readers seeking a puzzle-like diversion. Readers will see that in Selznick’s carefully rendered artwork, the disjointed narratives, the stories that almost but don’t quite but maybe do intersect. Kaleidoscope is very much a product of the pandemic. While the story lacks any significant female characters, the nameless narrators do serve as a cipher of sorts allowing readers to insert themselves fully into each story. In some stories like “The Ice” or “The Spirit Machine” the grief is overt while other standout stories (“The Apple” or “In the Dark”) offer more optimism.Ĭommon images and themes throughout each story slowly unfold to bring a larger narrative of connection and loss into focus. A namesless narrator tells each story and although the characters change, always there is a nameless character trying to make their way back to James. In his author’s note Selznick explains the inspiration he drew directly from the early days of the pandemic when Selznick and his husband were separated for three months–a fracture that inspired more abstraction in his art and eventually led to this story.Įach chapter (or self-contained story depending on your interpretation of the text) begins with a kaleidoscopic image followed by the unabstracted image pulled directly from the story. Selznick’s latest illustrated novel reads as a series of interconnected short stories–mediations on the same themes of loss and separation examined through different lenses.

The School Story by Brian Selznick

But always, slowly, there is peace in Kaleidoscope (2021) by Brian Selznick. With answers found inside inside an apple.Įvery spin of the kaleidoscope fragments one story while bringing another into focus. A spirit machine born out of a dream made reality. It begins when a boy named James leaves a message for his father with a doll that will be discovered years later, encased in ice.Īlways there is searching. The past and the future mean nothing, and the time is always now.” “Maybe this is what it’s like to be inside the mind of God.













The School Story by Brian Selznick