Wednesday, May 1, 2024

66. Orris and Timble: The Beginning


Orris and Timble #1: Orris and Timble the Beginning. Kate DiCamillo. Illustrated by Carmen Mok. 2024. 80 pages. [Source: Library] [early chapter book, animal fantasy, friendship, storytelling]

First sentence: Orris the rat had made a nest for himself in a hole in the wall and papered it with pages from a box of discarded books. In the rat's nest were his treasures: a red velvet slipper, a yellow marble, and a sardine can. Sometimes if the light shone into the rat's nest at just the right angle, the king on the sardine can looked Orris in the eye.

Premise/plot: Orris and Timble are unlikely friends: one is a rat and the other is an owl. But when Timble (the owl) finds himself TRAPPED in a mouse trap (in the hayloft), Orris faces a hard decision. Should he make a good and noble choice and save the owl??? Or should he leave things well enough alone??? The owl, after all, might eat him anyway after he has been freed. True, it's distressing to hear him screech and cry out, but, is it truly his problem to solve? Maybe. Maybe not. 

My thoughts: I love, love, love, love, love, love, love Kate DiCamillo. I do. I expect great things and am rarely disappointed. (Though there are a handful of books that I don't particularly like. But when you consider the vastness of her body of work, then it's clear that she's absolutely fabulous.) I love, love, love the focus on STORYTELLING, the way stories can bring two people together despite the differences in their backgrounds. I enjoyed the characterization and the narrative itself. Beautiful writing. 

 

© 2024 Becky Laney of Young Readers

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