Easy is hard, and effortless is elusive and exhausting. Writers (and artists, and athletes and
academics, etc) labor for hours, days, weeks and years to make something they
produce look easy and effortless. Easy
can be deceiving. Easy should never be
confused with inferior. Like I said, it
takes a lot of work to make something look easy. And so it is with the greatest pleasure I
recognize Suzanne Selfors and the first book in her new series, The
Sasquatch Escape.
Ben Silverstein has been sentenced to death…or very nearly
that. His parents have sent him away for
the summer so they can work out some personal issues. Ben has been sent to spend the summer with
his Grandpa Abe, who lives in what can only be described as the remains of the
most boring town on the face of the planet.
Faced with a summer without television or wifi, spent hanging out at the
Senior Center with his grandfather (Friday is Pudding Day!), Ben has very
little hope for his prospects. But that
was before spotting a mysterious (and mysteriously large) shape in the sky, a
curious girl in town, and what even Ben can’t deny is a baby dragon in his
bedroom. Suddenly plunged into the
knowledge that there is the Known World and the Imaginary World, Ben and his
new friend Pearl Petal try to rescue the dragon and end up on a Sasquatch hunt,
all in service of the shadowy Dr. Woo.
Who is this unseen doctor? Is she
friend or foe?
Coming in at 200 pages, The Sasquatch Escape was
almost a single-sitting read for me (curses that I don’t have longer lunch
breaks!). The words and images simply
drip off the page in a lively stream, and it’s up to the reader to keep
up. This story is imaginative, exciting,
cagey, teasing (so many questions!) and just plain fun. Don’t underestimate the power of just plain
fun; it’s a very valuable thing. Ms.
Selfors’ characters are wonderfully drawn.
Ben comes from a privileged background: affluent L.A. family, every technological
advantage and a summer beach house. But
his life is far from perfect. His mother
is restrictive, and Ben doesn’t enjoy the freedoms that Pearl does, working in
the Dollar Store and going around town getting into all kinds of trouble (which
is not her fault, if you ask her).
Thinking his summer is going to be the most boring on record, he is
surprised, unnerved and exhilarated at the unexpected excitement he finds. Pearl is fascinating in her own right. She’s plucky, intelligent, boisterous and
curious, which partially explains why everyone in town seems to think she’s a “troublemaker”. Put together, Ben and Pearl make a dynamic
pair, and with a seemingly unending pantheon of imaginary creatures from which
to pull, I’m sure we’ll be reading about they’re adventures for at least a few
more years.
The Imaginary Veterinary: Book 1: The Sasquatch Escape
by Suzanne Selfors
2013, Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Library copy
2013, Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Library copy
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