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Barkbelly [Paperback]

Cat Weatherill (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

8 and up3 and up
One silver-starry night, a shiny, wooden egg falls from a flying machine high in the air . . . down, down, down through the midnight sky . . . down to the small village of Pumbleditch, where Barkbelly is born. Where he’s the only wooden boy. And where he’s the cause of a tragic accident.

Suddenly, Barkbelly’s only choice is to flee for his life—to run. As he tries to escape his haunting past, he faces extraordinary adventures and dangers. Every wooden step leads Barkbelly toward the dark and startling truth about where he comes from and the burning question of where he really belongs. With deliciously imaginative storytelling, Cat Weatherill creates an utterly magical world—and one wooden boy who’s sure to melt readers’ hearts.


From the Hardcover edition.

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 2-5–Barkbelly is a boy made of wood, mysteriously hatched from an egg and adopted by a childless couple. Their village is located in a world much like the ones found in European folktales, with a few magical features such as giant hedgehogs with magical spines and the wooden people to whom Barkbelly belongs. When he accidentally kills a younger playmate, he runs away, sure that the villagers will turn on him. Barkbelly has adventures in an industrial city, on the road with a circus, and on a pirate ship. When he discovers that he is not unique, but a member of a group of wooden people, he goes searching for his own birth family, a search with unexpected and unhappy results. The resolution seems convenient rather than convincing. Weatherill is a performance storyteller, and there is an oral storytelling feel to the characters and their reactions, as well as to the circularity of the plot. This does not translate wholly successfully to the longer chapter-book format, and independent readers might find the characters rather one-dimensional.–Sue Giffard, Ethical Culture Fieldston School, New York City
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Booklist

Gr. 4-7. A wooden egg falls from the sky and wallops a farmer in the field, who gives the egg to his wife as a memento. One cold winter, the egg is tossed on the fire to add needed heat--but instead of burning, it shudders and heaves, cracking open to reveal a small wooden baby. That baby, named Barkbelly by his astonished yet loving parents, grows into a sturdy, wooden boy. Although different from other children, Barkbelly enjoys his life in the village, until the day his hard, strong body collides with another little boy and accidentally kills him. He flees in panic, then conducts a wild and imaginative search for his identity and real family. Cleverly written and rich in character and detail, this quirky fantasy will be popular with many middle-grade readers, who will connect with its themes of differences, personal values, relationships, and consequences. Sample illustrations show moody, full-page images that suit the novel's fablelike sensibility. Holly Koelling
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 8 and up
  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Yearling (June 10, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0440420776
  • ISBN-13: 978-0440420774
  • Product Dimensions: 5.2 x 0.8 x 7.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,330,028 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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4 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The best book I've read in ages...., August 24, 2005
By 
Eclair Paradise "Eclair" (Wellington, New Zealand) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Barkbelly (Hardcover)
My daughter (aged nine) and I read this together and both loved it. In fact we are counting down the days until March 2006 when Cat Weatherill's next book is published. A wonderful blend of adventure, fantasy, history and emotion, with beautiful language and imagery throughout.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Engaging tale., December 10, 2006
This review is from: Barkbelly (Hardcover)
Cat Weatherhill's BARKBELLY tells of a wooden boy, an accident, and a race for his life which leads Barkbelly into confrontation with a circus, a pirate ship, and more. The world is filled with dangers for a wooden boy - but his dreams may ultimately rescue him in this engaging tale.
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Truth is a snail, March 6, 2006
This review is from: Barkbelly (Hardcover)
Everything old is new again. In this day and age authors aren't afraid to revitalize old story ideas. They aren't afraid to face critics who may pooh-pooh their efforts for being overly familiar. Such a critic was I when I picked up "Barkbelly" for the first time. Being the shallow cad that I am, I was drawn to its cover. Illustrator Peter Brown's mesmerizing image of a boy running for his life had a kind of "Jimmy Corrign" Chris Ware look to it. Later, when I had it at home, I glanced at the plot summary. The words "wooden boy" popped right out at me. Uh-oh, think I. Wooden boy? Have I just grabbed myself a Pinocchio rip-off? Further scanning of the summary without actually reading it(I like plots to surprise me) and the words "shiny wooden egg" also caught my attention. Uh-oh, think I. Eggs? Not Pinocchio then but potentially something equally odd. So with a mind fully prejudiced to dislike this book based on four words I dove headfirst into the novel. Let that be a lesson to you, my children. No matter how odd a book may sound, if it's well-written enough it'll trump even the best founded of prejudices. My prejudices were on remarkably shaky ground to begin with, so it didn't take long for Cat Weatherill to win me over. Yes, it is about a wooden boy who comes from a wooden egg. It is also a rousing quest tale and a great story about facing up to your past and finding people (both good and bad) in the world.

A wooden egg falls from a flying machine down down down to the earth below. It lands in a field where it waits. When the harvesting of that same field begins, the egg happens to bean one Gable Gantry upside the head. The man isn't hurt particularly but the owner of the field wants nothing to do with the object, so Gable takes it home to his wife. She cleans it off and displays it in the window until, on one particularly cold night, the two decide to toss it on the fire. In a flash and a bang the egg suddenly bursts from the fire, grows arms and legs and a head, and is a small screaming infant. The childless couple is delighted and name the wooden baby Barkbelly. Barkbelly, however, grows at an inconceivable rate. By the end of the month he's the size of a ten-year-old boy. The village accepts him readily enough but when the boy is involved in an unfortunate game of Bull Run with another boy he finds himself fleeing the village for his life. Now Barkbelly is on an adventure like no other. He works in a factory making jam, joins the circus, is captured by pirates, and finally discovers the truth behind other wooden people like himself. The question is what is he going to do with this knowledge, now that he's found it?

The book gets off to a slow start. It isn't until page 73, actually, that you hit the incident that makes Barkbelly run. But that isn't to say that what comes before isn't necessary. The real point of this book is that freedom, for all its disadvantages, is the right of every living creature. Barkbelly tends to some very large hedgehogs (or urchins) early on in the book and finds himself saddened by the idea that they are prisoners of the man who tends to them. In freeing them Barkbelly (quite unbeknownst to him) saves himself in the future. There are other themes and stories floating about the book as well, of course. There's the idea that when the truth comes, it tends to come slowly. The idea that family is what you make of it and just because you're directly related to someone, that doesn't mean they're like you. I liked that Weatherill took the old elderly-childlesss-couple-adopts-a-strange-creature-as-a-son idea and pumped some new life into it. Heck, I liked a lot of things in this book. I liked that for much of the time Barkbelly thinks that he's invincible. Aren't all young people like that? Of course, in his particular case, Barkbelly has some evidence to back him up. He's found, early on, that if a part of him is chopped off it just grows back and he never feels any pain. It comes as a really great shock to him to discover that he can be killed by fire. If we're looking at themes in this book, the greatest perhaps is that of a human being growing up. "Barkbelly" is an ideal metaphor packed in a children's book.

And the writing itself is quite nice as well. Weatherill has skillfully created a little world that doesn't try to do too much. Some first-time children's writers pack as much fantasy elements as they can into a book in the hope that it will make it good ("The King In the Window" by Adam Gopnik commits this crime, I believe). This author, however, knows exactly what she wants to bring into this story and does so. There are some fantastical things, of course. People make of wood, giant urchins, and the like. But for the most part this is a realistic story, and that realism makes you really care and worry for Barkbelly. When he sets off into the great big bad world, you know it's going to be just as nice and ugly as our own. No magic is going to poof him out of his difficulties (except at the end, but I'll get to that). No fairy with a wand is going to make his troubles go away. It makes for a much better read. Even at the beginning the book gets your attention with some lovely descriptive passages. A parrot trying to eat Barkbelly's egg, "tasted salt and sand, forest and fern". When it comes to writing and great characters and a wonderful plot (that really takes off after page 73), "Barkbelly" has them all beat.

Of course, the book isn't perfect. Not quite. I was quite excited as I reached its end. I thought Weatherill had something pretty special going on. Then I reached the climax of the book and my little heart sunk. The book relies on a miracle to save Barkbelly at the end and while I won't tell you what that miracle is, it's kind of a cheap escape. Not that the author doesn't set you up for it long in advance. Say what you will about Ms. Weatherill, she definitely knows how to tie all her loose ends together. Just the same, I've little use for miracles in children's books. To me they're just cheap cop-outs. Authorial short-cuts to a happy ending. I've other objections to the climax as well but saying what they are would give away the book's finale and I don't want to do that. I know that a lot of people will differ from me on this subject, so I won't belabor it. Suffice it to say, it disappointed me but didn't quench my love for the novel. In fact, Weatherill ends her story with a wonderful little fable. The fable is so well told and so spot-on that I almost wish that the author would consider plucking it from "Barkbelly" and making it into its own separate picture book. I can promise at least one interested customer for such an object.

In the end, I'd recommend "Barkbelly" to any and all interested children. Recently I've been reading a lot of children's books that are fantastical in nature but would be more appropriate for older kiddies. The nice thing about "Barkbelly" is that it can be read to kids of all ages. I don't know how interesting some would find the passages that talk about the intricacies of a jam factory, but by and large this is a gripping epic of a tale that ties up neatly and with some great (dare I say?) lessons along the way. One of my favorite books of the year, no question.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
wooden boy
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Farmer Muckledown, Little Pan Evans, Missus Maddox, Young Master Tything, Lord Fox, Fish Patterson, Mop Mallory, Farmer Gubbin, Ferny Wood, Miss Taffeta, Brick Pullman, Apron Browning, Captain Kempe, Urchin Cup, Farmer Bunkum, Moth Williams, Gable Gantry, Stardust Palace, Old Master Tything, Dipper Dean, Candy Pie, Mister Mossman, Miss Dillwater, Freckle Flannagan, Barrenta Bay
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