Kurtz (I'm Sorry, Almira Ann, 1999, etc.) turns personal disaster into a universally affecting book about the 1997 flooding...

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"RIVER FRIENDLY, RIVER WILD"

Kurtz (I'm Sorry, Almira Ann, 1999, etc.) turns personal disaster into a universally affecting book about the 1997 flooding of the Red River in Grand Forks, North Dakota. Pictures and text catapult readers into the experience of loss when a river swells higher than anyone could have imagined and floods a town. Fleeing her home, the narrator leaves her cat behind and spends much of the flood's aftermath missing her "motor-stomach Kiwi cat" as her family sleeps on the shelter's hard cots; knows that "someday I'll do the same for someone else" as she accepts provisions others have anonymously donated and delivered; sifts through the family's sodden Christmas box to find mostly useless evidence of happy memories; and sees the unutterable mess and loss of all that is home, which will finally, ironically, be washed away by a new, life-saving dike. The beautifully articulate poems chronicle as well the loss of a good neighborhood, one where people save a cat because they can and it's a good thing to do, just as they would, in happier times, have loaned a cup of sugar. Without sentimentality, the book speaks of loss as elemental as the force bringing it and of survival of equal magnitude. Brennan's stylish oils, sometimes framed on a page, sometimes in full-bleed pages or spreads, capture and express this blend of specific universality. A book that belongs on every shelf in buildings up and down the country's riverways. (Picture book/poetry. 5-10)

Pub Date: March 1, 2000

ISBN: 1416934871

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: N/A

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2000

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