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Ottoline Goes to School
 
 
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Ottoline Goes to School [Hardcover]

Chris Riddell (Author, Illustrator)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

Price: $10.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Book Description

8 and up3 and upOttoline

Ottoline Brrown and her best friend, Mr. Munroe, are going away to school . . . and they're not scared in the least—even if it is haunted!


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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 3-6–In this second story about Ottoline, who lives with her faithful, hairy best friend, Mr. Monroe, readers are visually thrust into her Big City life, as she befriends Cecily, who is quite a storyteller, and decides to accompany her to the Alice B. Smith School for the Differently Gifted. There the students, each with an outlandish and noteworthy pet, seek out their talents in origami curtain-making, plate-spinning, tea-sipping, and other different arts. Ottoline flounders, unable to find her special talent, but is drawn to the mystery of the curse of the Horse of Hammersteins. In the end, she proves to be a fine sleuth. From the pagination symbols to the postcards Ottoline sends and receives from her Roving Collector parents, each illustration is ornately drawn in ink, akin to the style of Edward Gorey, but sunnier. The layout flaunts myriad combinations of picture and text. This is an outstanding example of a picture book-cum-graphic novel, in which Riddell dazzles readers with visual detail and comical oddities and language that is rich, zany, and imaginative. It will satisfy visually needy and visually discerning readers.–Sara Paulson-Yarovoy, American Sign Language and English Lower School PS 347, New York City
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

Praise for Ottoline Goes to School:“This is an outstanding example of a picture book-cum-graphic novel, in which Riddell dazzles readers with visual detail and comical oddities and language that is rich, zany, and imaginative. It will satisfy visually needy and visually discerning readers.” (School Library Journal )

“An entertaining alternative for chapter-book readers.” (ALA Booklist )

“The work of a genius.” (Sunday Telegraph )

Praise for Ottoline and the Yellow Cat:“The illustrations add humor, depth, and momentum to the narrative…Exceptional.” (School Library Journal (starred review) )

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 8 and up
  • Hardcover: 176 pages
  • Publisher: HarperCollins (June 23, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0061449008
  • ISBN-13: 978-0061449000
  • Product Dimensions: 7.3 x 5.6 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #249,062 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

author spotlight
Chris Riddell is the co-creator of the bestselling Edge Chronicles series, with Paul Stewart. He has illustrated many children's books including the award-winning Pirate Diary. He is also the political cartoonist for the Guardian and Observer newspapers.

Talking to Paul Stewart & Chris Riddell about the Edge Chronicles

Q. What was your inspiration for The Edge Chronicles?
Paul: The Edge Chronicles started off with the map. Chris drew it and gave it to me saying, 'here is the world, tell me what happens there.'
Chris: I drew a map that looked like the edge of a map because I've always been fascinated by the edges of maps - the place where the known world ends.
Paul: My main inspiration for the Deepwoods was perhaps the fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm, though other books-Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass, Gormenghast, Gulliver's Travels- also played their part.
Q: What was your favorite character(s) to create?
Chris: My favorite character is the spindlebug. It was easy for Paul to write that it was see-through, like glass, but a challenge for an illustrator to draw. The creatures live an immense amount of time-up to four centuries -which means that they witness a lot more history of the Edge than other characters.
Paul: My favorite characters are the banderbears. Chris drew them first as fierce, pyramid-like bear creatures. Because they looked so ferocious, I made their character more timid. We have enjoyed developing the creatures as the series has progressed, learning about their natural habits and habitat and creating a language all of their own.
Q: Where did you come up with the names for your characters? The various personalities and life stories?
Paul: Both of us hate the clichéd fantasy names and tried to make the names in the Edge world a little different. Woodtrolls have woody names, like Snatchwood, Gruffbark, Snetterbark. Slaughterers have 'meaty' names like Gristle, Sinew, Tendon and Brisket. The academics have Latin/Basque names with lots of ius's and x's. Cowlquape, who goes through lots of changes, has a name taken from the German for tadpole - Kaulquappe. While Twig, of course, is just a tiny bit of the forest.
As the series has progressed, with prequels and sequels, the life histories of the various characters have become more deeply described. So Twig's mother, Maris, is only mentioned in Beyond the Deepwoods. In book 4, the Curse of the Gloamglozer, we meet her as a girl. And in the book we have just completed, Book 7 - Freeglader - we learn all about what happened to her after she abandoned her baby in the Deepwoods. The continuity revealed as the story unfolds is deeply satisfying.
Q: What was your favorite book as a child?
Chris: Flat Stanley by Jeff Brown
Paul: The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster
Q: Since you both work as a team from conception to finish, what is the creative process like? How exactly does the collaboration work?
Paul: The pictures and words take shape simultaneously, each affecting the development of the other. Sometimes characters and creatures start with a picture, sometimes with a textual description. In addition, the plot is worked on constantly by both of us and, when they are around, our children! Similarly, the text is passed back and forth, being rewritten continuously, until both of us are happy with it.
Q: What has been the most challenging part of writing the series?
Paul: The whole process is challenging. More importantly, though, it is also rewarding. Both of us have immense fun playing with the Edge world. Beyond the Deepwoods was the simplest book, an episodic rite of passage novel where we, as well as the main protagonist, began to explore this new world. As we have gone deeper into it, the world has become richer and richer, and the storylines similarly, more involved. We are fascinated by the way the world is still developing as we learn more and more about its history and explore all areas of the political and natural world in increasing depth.
Q: When did you first begin writing/drawing?
Chris: At five years old in the back pew of my father's church. My mother gave me paper and pens to keep me quiet during Dad's (very interesting) sermons.
Paul: From the moment I could write, I have been writing down stories. At seven, I was working on a series of stories about a snail called Oliver. At ten, I attempted to write a follow-up to The Phantom Tollbooth with ideas that took shape over the next 20 years and finally became a book entitled The Thought Domain.
Q: In Midnight Over Sanctaphrax, Twig deals with the loss of two father figures. How is this important for his development?
Paul: Twig has to grow up and assume responsibility for his father's crew and, when he learns of Tuntum's death, he realizes how he has grown and matured since he left the Woodtroll village. He hopes that Tuntum would be proud of him, and what he has achieved.
Q: What scene did you have the most fun creating?
Chris: Both of us enjoyed the wig-wig arena scene a lot. The whole Shryke slave market, with its platforms and walkways all hanging from the Deepwoods trees, was great fun to create as a home for the flightless Shrykes. The escape from it on Prowlgrinback was also great fun both to write and draw.
Paul: Midnight over Sanctaphrax was the third in the series, and the book where we were beginning to reap the rewards both of close collaboration and of getting to know the world more deeply. The Prowlgrins (which I had originally described as being like hyena/leopard-like creatures, but which Chris had drawn as a curious cross between a whale and a toad) looked to me as if they were brilliantly designed for leaping from branch to branch. Therefore the pictures in Book 1 directly influenced the plot in Book 3. Similarly, in book 1, I had wanted a pirate-like punishment similar to keelhauling, and had come up with sky-firing. In Midnight over Sanctaphrax, this throwaway idea becomes pivotal to the plot- but we won't give it away just in case you haven't read the book yet!
Q: The Edge Chronicles seems perfectly suited for film, with its fast-paced action, loveable creatures, and incredible comic-timing. Were you thinking along these lines during its inception?
Paul: We did not deliberately set out to produce fiction which could be turned into a film. That said, both of us work in a very visual way, so a lot of the plotting, characterization and scene development is quite cinematic. It would be a great thrill to see The Edge Chronicles realized on the big screen!

 

Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Blend of Whodunit and Magic are Sure to Draw in Curious Young Readers, July 1, 2009
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This review is from: Ottoline Goes to School (Hardcover)
The best kids' books are ones that entertain and delight, compelling young readers to finish the story, relate emotionally and wonder at the marvels between the covers. Truly fantastic kids' books challenge young readers to think about the world (and themselves) in new ways. When OTTOLINE GOES TO SCHOOL arrived in the mail, I knew I held in my hands a book that did all of the above.

In this second Ottoline book, written and illustrated by Chris Riddell, Ottoline is still living in the Pepperpot building, mostly far from her parents who are traveling collectors. She and her best friend and guardian, a Norwegian bog creature named Mr. Munroe, are strolling through Pettigrew Park and Ornamental Gardens one Tuesday morning when they meet an interesting young girl named Cecily Forbes-Lawrence III, who is with her Patagonian pony, Mumbles. Cecily, like Ottoline, is apart from her parents much of the time. Her father was busy in banking and her mother at the Big City Museum of Modern Art. Cecily has to schedule bedtime stories with her parents' secretaries well in advance. Ottoline and Cecily bond over their orphan-like existence and love of fanciful stories. But Mr. Munroe grows jealous and feels ignored.

His feeling of isolation grows stronger when Ottoline decides to follow Cecily to boarding school, and Mr. Munroe has to live in the pets' quarters with a toucan, a small hairy elephant, an invisible dog, a robot and Mumbles. Mr. Munroe's thoughts are never expressed in words as Riddell doesn't give him any dialogue, and in fact, only a bit of his eyes shows as most of his body is covered in long shaggy hair. It is a testament to Riddell's skill and artistry that though he never talks, Mr. Munroe is perfectly easy to understand.

Though Ottoline has never been to school before, she is excited to join the handful of other students at The Alice B. Smith School for the Differently Gifted. She is eager to discover her own different gift. But her classes, such as Paper Folding, Advanced Musing, Seeming, Being and Whistling Choir, don't seem to help in that direction, as fun as they are. The Wright Sisters are talented at aerial flower arranging and the Sultana of Pahang at curtain origami, but Ottoline worries she will never find out what her own different gift is.

On top of her academic dilemma, Ottoline, along with Mr. Munroe, is working to solve a mystery at the school: things are going missing, and students are being gently sabotaged and warned to leave the school. Could it be one of the school's many ghosts? Or is there a living culprit behind the haunting? Just as they brought down the sinister Yellow Cat in OTTOLINE AND THE YELLOW CAT, Ottoline and her Norwegian sidekick plan to solve this mystery as well.

Once again Chris Riddell succeeds in marrying a fun and quirky mystery to his charming, detailed and strange line drawings. Ottoline is a fantastic character, as lovely to look at as she is fun to cheer on. She is clever, stylish, kind-hearted and odd; the kind of character who, like all the best ones in children's literature, are full of energy and totally unforgettable. OTTOLINE GOES TO SCHOOL is a great addition to this new series; its blend of whodunit and magic are sure to draw in curious young readers.

--- Reviewed by Sarah Rachel Egelman
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5.0 out of 5 stars Ottoline Goes to School, December 8, 2010
This review is from: Ottoline Goes to School (Hardcover)
I am the mother of a 6 year old and teach second grade. At home and at school the Ottoline stories are a hit. They are absolutely delightful stories that I can't recommend highly enough. I am just sorry that you have to order Ottoline at Sea from the UK - which I did. I hope that there are plans for more stories.
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5.0 out of 5 stars another fun story for reluctant readers and lovers of whimsical, magical illustration, June 2, 2010
This review is from: Ottoline Goes to School (Hardcover)
Ottoline Goes to School continues our heroine's adventures. Ottoline befriends a girl at the park whose tall tales intrigue her. When her new friend Cecily must return to a school for the "differently gifted" Ottoline asks her parents if she can go, too, to discover her different gift!

One interesting aspect of this tale is Ottoline's unawareness of the feelings of her devoted friend and caretaker Mr. Munroe, who becomes hurt by Ottoline's bond with her new friend/her lack of awareness of his feelings. Many parents may relate to this in their own way, remembering the twinges felt at various ages as children become more independent and focused upon peers; children may gain sensitivity to the need to not forget old friends when we gain new ones.

An unexpected delight in the story relates to Ottoline's parents. While they are still traveling the world, they continue to make painstaking efforts to ensure that she is well cared for and aware of their love and guidance. In contrast, Cecily's parents (whom she lives with) neglect her emotional needs. The exaggerations of each family are very amusing and useful, leaving space in-between to honor all of our diverse family arrangements if they are graced with love.

Children should read Ottoline and the Yellow Cat first, then enjoy this fun, gorgeously illustrated story on their own or as a bedtime chapter book. Recommended.
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