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Chinook!
 
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Chinook! [Hardcover]

Michael O. Tunnell (Author), Barry Root (Illustrator)


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Hardcover, March 1993 --  

Book Description

6 and up
Mr. Andy tells Thad and Annie some tales about the spectacular effects of chinooks, hot winter winds that suddenly spring up and cause dramatic changes in the temperature.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In his children's book debut, Tunnell tells of the great, hot winds that tear through the winter countryside of the Pacific Northwest. A brother and sister recently moved to that region meet Andrew Delaney McFadden, an eccentric old man who is bracing himself for the return of the great Chinook that turned his community upside-down 50 years earlier. In a rather labored exposition, the man tells the wide-eyed children what a Chinook is and recounts the havoc the great gale wreaked on the town. Unfortunately, Tunnell's story, with its absence of a directed narrative and fleshed-out characters, is little more than a series of loosely connected tall tales. Even the somewhat predictable "surprise" ending, in which the long-awaited Chinook is seen rolling into town once more, fails to satisfy. Root's ( The Araboolies of Liberty Street ; The Singing Fir Tree ) peppy watercolors--an agreeable stylistic departure for this talented artist--provide a polished chromatic shift between winter's blue and white landscape and the golds of the Chinook-parched earth. Such whimsically surreal images as a horse-drawn sleigh "sailing" gaily through a flooded village add needed sparkle. Ages 5-up.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal

Grade 1-3-- A nostalgic reminiscence with a tall-tale flavor. Tunnell's quirky story begins with two young children, newly moved to a rural area in the West, but quickly switches to a series of exaggerated recollections recounted by a friendly local. The brief vignettes offered by "Mr. Andy" describe the effects of "granddaddy chinooks": winds so hot that they can melt snow and confuse the seasons. While some of the events depicted are humorous, others are somewhat disturbing. The vision (and picture) of horses hanging from a church steeple, for example, is extremely graphic and unappealing. For the most part, though, Root's illustrations are vigorous and amusing, with a primitive feel that suits the colloquial flavor of the text perfectly. Unfortunately, although Tunnell's text is smoothly written, the unfamiliarity of the phenomenon described, combined with the distinctly old-fashioned tone of the tale, may serve to distance young readers. For these reasons, despite the quality of both illustrations and text, the book may have only a limited regional appeal. --Lisa Dennis, The Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 6 and up
  • Hardcover: 1 pages
  • Publisher: Tambourine; 1st edition (March 1993)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0688108695
  • ISBN-13: 978-0688108694
  • Product Dimensions: 11.2 x 8.8 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #6,018,888 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I love books! This love affair began when I was small. My grandmother who raised me would read to me every day: fairy tales, comic books, and wonderful picture books like Caps for Sale and Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel. I soon discovered that books were the world's best teachers and entertainers. So, naturally, I grew up wanting to spend my life working with books.

When it came time to pick a profession, I decided to study law (which doesn't involve the kind of books I like). I was well into my university course work to prepare me for law school when something happened that changed my plans. At the time, I was working for an automobile dealer in Salt Lake City, Utah, and the service manager asked me to deliver a car to a customer at a nearby elementary school. The second I walked through the school doors, I was flooded with the strangest feelings. I remembered my favorite books and my magical childhood years. The next day I changed my major to education. Since then, I've completed several degrees, all of them relating to reading, children's literature, and teaching.

As with many avid readers, I harbored, since childhood, the wish to create my own stories. I wrote off and on when I was young, and then tried my first novel during my middle twenties (it was rejected by twenty or thirty publishers). Then for a number of years, instead of creating stories I channeled my writing efforts into professional educational books and journal articles. All the while, my desire to write books for young readers stayed strong. In the early 1990s, I found my way back to writing stories. My first effort was the manuscript for the picture book Chinook!, which was accepted on my third submission attempt by Tambourine Books (William Morrow).

Because I teach children's literature courses at a university, people sometimes ask if my teaching helps me to be a better writer. After all, I teach my students about children's books, what makes some books "better" than others, and I have, as a part of my professional endeavors, critiqued books for review journals. Therefore, I should know what makes for good writing and what doesn't. However, when I began writing my own books I discovered critiquing someone else's work is an entirely different process than creating your own stories. Perhaps I was simply too close to my own work, which made applying what I thought I knew about quality literature difficult. In any case, I had a lot to learn (and the learning has just begun!) about the creative process. I guess writers are born perhaps more than they are made. (I feel the same way about teachers.) So, part of the challenge has been to find and cultivate any spark of literary creativity with which I might have been blessed.

For more about Michael O. Tunnell, see the following sources:

Something About the Author, volume 103. Edited by Alan Hedblad. The Gale Group, 1999, pp. 168-173.

The Eighth Book of Junior Authors and Illustrators. Edited by Connie Rockman. H.W. Wilson, 2000, pp. 529-533.

Something About the Author, volume 157. The Gale Group, 2005, pp. 247-252

ALSO SEE MY WEBSITE: http://www.michaelotunnell.com

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