The Invention of Hugo Cabret: A Review

Throwback Thursday!

“The story I am about to share with your takes place in 1931, under the roofs of Paris. Here you will meet Hugo Cabret, who once, long ago, discovered a mysterious drawing that changed his life forever.

But before you turn the page, I want you to picture yourself sitting in the darkness, like the beginning of a movie. On screen, the sun will soon rise, and you will find yourself zooming toward a train station in the middle of the city. You will rush through the doors into a crowded lobby. You will eventually spot a boy amid the crowd, and he will start to move through the train station. Follow him, because he is Hugo Cabret. His head is full of secrets, and he’s waiting for his story to begin” – The Invention of Hugo Cabret, by Brian Selznick

Sometimes the opening of a novel has me leaning in, kind of holding my breath in anticipation of where it is about to take me. Can you feel that? Are you following Hugo through that Parisian train station in your mind? I took the opposite road into this book than I normally do; I saw the movie first. The movie is called Hugo and it was so magical and touching that after watching it last winter with my kids, I wanted to go find the novel that inspired it. The story follows a young boy, Hugo, who has been orphaned. He lives in the walls of a train station in Paris and steals to survive. He also steals to get the parts he needs to rebuild his automaton – a mechanical man that is the last thing he has that remains of his father. When Hugo is caught stealing from the toy store in the station, his life changes. What follows is ordinary magic: movies and books, friendship and family – breathing life into the past.

The reason I wanted to feature Hugo Cabret this month is because it made me see books in a different way. The author, Brian Selnick tells the story in traditional text and pencil drawings that are arresting in and of themselves. What makes the novel so unique is that his art doesn’t accompany the text, it replaces it –  for pages and pages – so the story is literally told in words and images. His ability to flip between the two mediums allows him to convey different aspects of the story in a way that is so compelling – he creates an intimacy through the words and drawings that is unlike conventional novels.

img_3691.jpg

Selznick’s inspiration for the book was, ” … a book called Edison’s Eve: A Magical History of the Quest for Mechanical Life … the book told the true story of a collection of elaborate, mechanical wind-up figures (known as automata), which were donated to a museum in Paris. The collection was neglected in a damp attic and eventually had to be thrown away. I imagined a boy finding those broken, rusted machines, and at that moment, Hugo and his story were born.” In his attempt to fix the automaton, Hugo meets Isabelle and her guardian, Papa Georges. This meeting also brings Hugo into the world of movies, something his father had loved,  and Selznick includes stills from the early films Hugo and Isabelle watch to further his story.

img_3726.jpg

The combination of text, art and film all serve to reinforce the important role that stories play in our lives. Selznick’s decision to root the fantastical story of Hugo’s experience in the history of automata and early film makes it both more believable and more magical. This is a beautiful book – both in terms of the story it conveys and the ways in which Selznick is able to combine the text with his drawing and the archival photographs. Whether it is for you, or for a young person in your life, I think The Invention of Hugo Cabret is a book that can really be savored for the way it celebrates story and art by getting us to follow Hugo through that train station in Paris a long time ago.

 

 

Throwback Thursday!

Hello, hello, hello!

“Dorothy told the Witch all her story; how the cyclone had brough her to the Land of Oz, how she had found her companions, and of the wonderful adventures they had met with.” – The Wizard of Oz, L. Frank Baum

I’m so glad you popped in for a visit! It’s raining today so to get a bit of a head start on this whole blogging business, I decided to do get my feet wet (pun!) with a Throwback Thursday and a Bonus Book this month. So let’s get started with our TBT, shall we? There are a lot of good reasons to celebrate children’s lit: maybe you have kids in your life and you want to be able to share some wonderful stories with them; maybe you’re a bit of a kid at heart yourself and you enjoy treating yourself to a blast from the past or exploring new books by children’s and young adult (YA) authors.

I feel the tug of nostalgia every time I pick up a book I loved as a kid, and I love being able to return to those characters and places with my own children. Really good children’s books hold their magic, even when we revisit them as adults. When I get sick, I still like to curl up in bed a reread a book from my childhood; somehow it always helps me feel better.

So, for my first ever TBT, I chose a classic, The Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum. It is a great fit for next month’s theme about thinking of old things in new ways. There is a lot to love about this book – the setting of Oz is magical and inspires so much imagination – Munchkins, an Emerald City, a Wicked Witch – what’s not to love? But beyond a great adventure story, what I like most about this book is how much of it feels like a metaphor for the lessons we learn in life. We all have those moments of feeling stuck in our own personal “great gray prairie” and imagination is what allows us to escape. Whether it is leaving Kansas to head down a yellow brick road or some sticky situation in our current lives – imagination is what allows us to reinvent and find a better way.

There were so many elements of this story that captured me as a child. I had the book on audio cassette(how’s that for a TBT?) and I listened to it over and over again. Dorothy was an average, everyday girl and yet she managed to free Oz from the Wicked Witch (and those horrible Flying Monkeys) and help her friends along the way. I still think of lessons I have learned from The Wizard of Oz: sometimes the great and terrible things we face really are just a little man behind a curtain and when we find the courage to confront them, we learn we are stronger than we thought. The journey is always, always easier when we go through life with our friends. Often we don’t appreciate how much we love home until we are forced to be away from it. And sometimes it turns out those winged monkeys we thought were so horrible were just actually under the enchantment of sorceress/princess who wasn’t very impressed with practical jokes. Okay, well maybe I haven’t found the real-life application for that bit just yet …

So, if you haven’t read The Wizard of Oz, or maybe you’ve only seen the movie (spolier alert: the shoe are silver, not ruby red) then it might be worth picking up for the next time you’re sick in bed with a bad cold. I hope you get a chance to curl up with a good book on this rainy Thursday and I’d love to hear about some of the classics you loved as a kid! Please post a comment or send me a message. Until next week, happy reading!

The Wiard of Oz. Penguin Threads edition
How cool is it that the inside of the cover actually looks like the back of a piece of embroidery? Sigh.