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    The Song from Somewhere Else

    The Song from Somewhere Else

    2.5 2

    by A.F. Harrold, Levi Pinfold (Illustrator)


    eBook

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    $10.49
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      ISBN-13: 9781681194141
    • Publisher: Bloomsbury USA
    • Publication date: 07/03/2017
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 224
    • File size: 24 MB
    • Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.
    • Age Range: 8 - 12 Years

    A.F. Harrold is an English poet and author who writes and performs for both children and adults. His novel The Imaginary was a Kirkus Reviews Best Middle Grade Book. He is the owner of many books, a handful of hats, and one beard. He spends his spare time showing off onstage, in schools, and at home, and his non-spare time sitting around, stroking his beard and writing things down. He lives in Reading, England, with a stand-up comedian and two cats.

    www.afharroldkids.com

    Levi Pinfold has been drawing from imagination for as long as he can remember. He is the author and illustrator of The Django,The Greenling, and Black Dog, which won the prestigious CILIP Kate Greenaway Medal. Born in the Forest of Dean, he has somehow found himself living in northern Australia. He likes paintings, books, music, and some cats.

    www.levipinfold.com
    A.F. Harrold is an English poet (1975 - present). He writes and performs for adults and children, in cabaret and in schools, in bars and in basements, in fields and indoors. He was Glastonbury Festival Website's Poet-In-Residence in 2008, and Poet-In-Residence at Cheltenham Literature Festival in 2010. He won the Cheltenham All Stars Slam Championship in 2007 and has had his work on BBC Radio 4, Radio 3 and BBC7. He is active in schools work, running workshops and slams and doing performances at ungodly hours of the morning, and has published several collections of poetry. He is the owner of many books, a handful of hats, a few good ideas and one beard.
    Levi Pinfold has been drawing from imagination for as long as he can remember. His published picture books are The Django, Black Dog and Greenling. Black Dog won the prestigious CILIP Kate Greenaway Medal in 2013. Born in the Forest of Dean, he has somehow found himself living in northern NSW, Australia. He likes paintings, books, music, and some cats.

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    From the author of the critically acclaimed The Imaginary comes a powerful story about friendship in the vein of Roald Dahl and Neil Gaiman.

    A School Library Journal Best Book of 2017

    A Wall Street Journal Best Book of 2017

    Frank thought her summer couldn't get any worse--until big, weird, smelly Nick Underbridge rescues her from a bully, and she winds up at his house.

    Frank quickly realizes there's more to Nick than meets the eye. When she's at his house, she hears the strangest, most beautiful music, music which leads her to a mysterious, hidden door. Beyond the door are amazing creatures that she never even dreamed could be real. For the first time in forever, Frank feels happy . . . and she and Nick start to become friends.

    But Nick's incredible secrets are also accompanied by great danger. Frank must figure out how to help her new friend, the same way that he has helped her.

    Paired with gorgeous black-and-white illustrations from Levi Pinfold, acclaimed author A. F. Harrold weaves a powerful story about unlikely friendship, strange magic, and keeping the shadows at bay.

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    The New York Times Book Review - Jonathan Auxier
    …the great strength of Harrold's book [is] using language to evoke more than the thing itself. Music pours into ears "like fresh orange juice, sharp and cold and full of vitamins." Shadowy creatures appear as "scribbled black lines of limbs." These are the touches of a poet, and they shine…Beneath [the fantastical conceits] lies a moving story about an outcast child, Nicholas, who has been tragically separated from his mother. Harrold…was himself an orphan, and he writes about parental loss in a way that moves beyond the hackneyed tropes often found in children's literature.
    From the Publisher
    "A.F. Harrold's work is masterfully paced and stunningly crafted; the story unwinds at a deliberate clip, the characters moving through a world that is at first dark, then mesmerizing, then cooly terrifying . . . Simply beautiful . . . [A] glorious and spine-chilling tale for middle grade readers." - Shelf Awareness

    "Strong characterizations and a good dose of spookiness are standouts in this illustrated novel . . . Hand to fans of Neil Gaiman’s Coraline, Holly Black’s Doll Bones, and other books that balance scariness and substance." - starred review, School Library Journal

    "Pinfold's atmospheric illustrations, darkly menacing and mysterious by turns, add to the contemporary folk-tale atmosphere . . . Captivating." - starred review, Kirkus Reviews

    "Fairy tale, fable, and dream . . . Harrold’s incisive, poetic way with words . . . intensifies the vague darkness of his otherworldly imagery. Pinfold’s shadowy art deepens the story’s air of mystery and threat." - starred review, The Horn Book Magazine

    "Friendship, acceptance, trust, and decency weave their magic throughout Harrold’s tale . . . Lush black-and-white illustrations by Pinfold enhance the secrecy, wonder, and mood of the story." - Booklist

    "British poet Harrold writes with an engaging voice rich with character . . . Spot illustrations and immersive double-page black and white drawings are captivating in their intricacy and melancholy, blending perfectly with the poignant tone that resonates through the whole novel." - BCCB

    "Harrold offers an appealingly childcentric world with hefty doses of scare and malevolence . . . Wonderfully entertaining." - starred review, Kirkus Reviews on THE IMAGINARY

    "[An] inventive mix of humor and suspense . . . A great choice for readers who like fantastic tales with a dose of true scariness." - starred review, School Library Journal on THE IMAGINARY

    "Most affecting and lovely when describing powerful relationships." - The New York Times Book Review on THE IMAGINARY

    "Pinfold’s story has a timeless quality . . . A great pick for storytime, bedtime, anytime." - starred review, Kirkus Reviews on BLACK DOG

    "Fear, fun, and just dripping with beauty." - starred review, School Library Journal on BLACK DOG

    "Quirky, funny, and often heart-stopping." - starred review, Booklist on BLACK DOG

    "Pinfold’s interiors are crammed with quirky detail." - starred review, Publishers Weekly on BLACK DOG

    Children's Literature - Lois Rubin Gross
    This is a book infused with darkness, both from the troubling storyline to the moody illustrations. It is a story that could be compared to Neil Gaiman’s Coraline or the Men in Black graphic novels, but it has a unique voice that will capture the imagination of middle readers looking for scary books. Neil Noble and his crew have targeted Francesca (Frank) Patel, and their torment has progressed from name-calling to physical intimidation. During one such incident, another classmate, Nick, steps in to rescue Frank but it is a rescue that she really does not want. Oversized, under washed Nick is also a subject of classroom ridicule and to align herself with him is to make herself an even bigger target. Nick, however, offers friendship without strings and is simply kind-hearted. Against her better judgement, Frankfalls in with and while visiting Nick’s house one day, Frank discovers his secret: he is a changeling and has come to this world through a secret portal in his basement. His troll mother lives in another realm and is literally worlds apart from him. When Frank’s bullies pummel the secret out of her, the portal to the other world opens wider and eerie visitors from other realms find their way to our world. Frank is a flawed heroine, haunted by her mistakes, just as Nick is an unlikely hero, ungainly yet lovable. The bully’s comeuppance is satisfying in a sinister way, and the theme of mother’s love that transcends realms is beautiful, even if it is “schmaltzy.” Reviewer: Lois Rubin Gross; Ages 10 to 14.
    School Library Journal
    ★ 05/01/2017
    Gr 4–6—Strong characterizations and a good dose of spookiness are standouts in this illustrated novel. After a strange boy named Nick rescues her from bullies, Frank begins a cautious friendship with her unpopular classmate. When she hears mysterious and beautiful music coming from Nick's cellar, Frank secretly investigates. She discovers a "leechway" that acts as a door to alternate realities. Nick's nonhuman mother lives in one of them; so do creepy "stick-creatures" who seem eager to invade our world. The two kids play heroic, save-the-world roles in an action-packed climax, but there's just as much tension in the carefully paced plot that leads up to it. Third-person narration conveys Frank's inner thoughts and perceptions, revealing a tentative, flawed, but quite likable protagonist. Amusing inner dialogues with her nervous stomach show how the girl struggles with self-esteem, courage, and ethical choices. She comes through bravely against the stick-figures, but there's a different, equally satisfying triumph in a final scene where she defends a child from bullies. The eeriness builds slowly as Frank gradually learns more about the leechway. The ominous mood is aided by atmospheric black-and-white drawings that capture the shadowy menace creeping into Frank's world. VERDICT Hand to fans of Neil Gaiman's Coraline, Holly Black's Doll Bones, and other books that balance scariness and substance.—Steven Engelfried, Wilsonville Public Library, OR
    Kirkus Reviews
    ★ 2017-04-17
    Francesca "Frank" Patel's summer holiday is interrupted, first by bullies and then by a glimpse of another world. The neighborhood goons pick on Frank with escalating meanness. But the odd, large, flat-faced boy from her school whose name (Nicholas Underbridge) hints at his unusual origins—the boy everyone claims smells and no one wants to sit with—rescues her bag from a nettle field where the bullies tossed it, then takes her to his house for refuge. Nick's house, filled with his dad's colorful abstract paintings, is otherwise tidy except for two things: there is a damp, rich, earthy odor there, and Frank hears extraordinary music that fills her soul and makes her long for more. Frank's curiosity results in a frightening, nearly world-ending chain of events. Harrold gracefully tosses together hints of quantum physics, old legends, and magic-ministry-type agents. Frank's struggle to reconcile her fear of her bullies, her growing friendship with Nick, and the truth about the maker of otherworldly music are poignantly convincing and likable. Pinfold's atmospheric illustrations, darkly menacing and mysterious by turns, add to the contemporary folk-tale atmosphere. The only hints about Frank's Indian heritage are her name and a minor moment when an elderly woman asks Frank's wisecracking at-home dad if they have tuna fish "where you come from." A captivating British import. (Fantasy. 8-11)

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