Lucy & Andy Neanderthal.
By Jeffrey Brown. Crown. $12.99.
Full of Beans. By Jennifer L.
Holm. Random House. $16.99.
The educational component of
Lucy & Andy Neanderthal is what
rescues Jeffrey Brown’s graphic novel from being just another situation comedy
that happens to be set 40,000 years ago. Some of this actually looks a bit like
The Flintstones (who are mentioned in
“A Brief History of Cavemen” at the end of the book), but Brown goes out of his way to provide some accurate scientific
information along with the fun – even though he takes many, many liberties with
life in Neanderthal times, from having the characters use modern English slang
to giving them a pet cat to having them present scientific names for animals (Apodemus sylvaticus rather than wood
mouse, for example). Nevertheless, when it comes to showing some aspects of everyday life for
Neanderthals (pronounced, as Brown explains, “NeanderTals”), the book
stays on solid scientific ground. And it includes two contemporary characters
who drop in periodically to explain, at the end of a section, what things were
really like 40,000 or so years ago – for instance, that mammoths, which
Neanderthals hunted, weighed about as much as a Tyrannosaurs rex. The basic
story lines here will be familiar to anyone who is used to standard
preteen-brother-and-sister family comedy: Lucy is older and comes up with most
of the clever ideas in the family, Andy wants to be bigger and stronger than he
is and go on mammoth hunts and generally grow up, neighbors Phil and Margaret
stir the pot of annoyance and helpfulness from time to time (Andy has a crush
on Margaret), and so on. Although the family-centered elements here are nothing
special, and Brown’s drawing style is pleasant but scarcely very distinctive,
what makes Lucy & Andy Neanderthal
both enjoyable and worthwhile is the extent to which it provides educational
material that slips in so easily as to be almost unperceived until readers
figure out that they have actually learned something. The way Neanderthals
sought the best rocks for tool-making, the way they actually worked to create
their tools and weapons, the way they probably handled the hunt for a mammoth,
the fact that Neanderthals split animal bones to extract marrow, how
Neanderthals made cave art – all this and more is here, some of it speculative
but even then based on what information scientists have been able to glean from
the fossil record so far. Actually, as the modern characters point out,
although art from 40,000 years ago is known, the earliest done by Neanderthals
came about 10,000 years later; and the way cave paintings were colored is
unknown, but may have involved charcoal from fires and the easy-to-find mineral
ochre. Lucy & Andy Neanderthal, the
first book of a planned series, is enjoyable enough as a fictional
graphic-novel tale of a make-believe family – most of whose members, it should
be noted, look more like modern humans than like Neanderthals, presumably so
Brown could more easily establish a connection with contemporary readers. But
it is as fiction derived from and sprinkled with fact that the book really
shines.
Full of Beans returns to a more-recent past, the 1930s, as Jennifer
L. Holm revisits the time and setting she previously explored in Turtle in Paradise. This is a companion
novel and a prequel, its focus being on Beans Curry, the first cousin of the
protagonist of Holm’s earlier book based on some of her own family’s
experiences in Depression-era Key West. The story focuses on Beans’ barefoot
Diaper Gang and the characters who cross their path, from a Bermuda-shorts-clad
New Deal representative trying to turn Key West into a tourist mecca (something
that was actually done quite successfully) to a Cuban rum smuggler named Johnny
Cakes whom Beans helps to earn money for his family but whose criminal
activities soon make the basically honest and good-hearted Beans feel awful.
Beans ends up trying to make amends by helping beautify the whole town, whose
down-on-their-luck residents (including Beans’ mom, who does laundry to make a
little money while Beans’ dad heads north to seek a factory job) need more than
the distractions of Sears catalogues and Shirley Temple movies to keep them
going. Beans does love films, and so does a reclusive adult he encounters,
whose leprosy keeps him isolated from everyone (this particular subplot feels
somewhat tacked-on). Holm is smart enough to evoke the time and place
effectively, including mentions of prominent writers who really did spend time
on Key West in this era; she is also clever enough to end Full of Beans with a bit of a scene from Turtle in Paradise, thus tying the two books neatly together. Certainly
fans of the earlier book (which came out in 2010) will enjoy this one. But Holm
tones down Beans’ personality more here than in the earlier book; there are so
many narrative elements that Holm loses track of some of them, and they remain
unresolved after the rather tacked-on happy ending; quite a few of the many characters
here are lackluster and two-dimensional; and the book is written at a simpler
level than Turtle in Paradise – it
may appeal to younger readers, even though the pace of Full of Beans is on the slow side and both books are intended for the
same age range of 8-12. This (+++) historical novel is better for the vividness
of its historical elements than for its rather vapid and predictable story
line.
No comments:
Post a Comment