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Loading... Yorick and Bones (2020)by Jeremy Tankard
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Ah, the quintessential man and man’s best friend story. Yorick is a newly-turned living skeleton, desperate to make some friends, who meets an adorable canine pal. Yorick is so pure and sweet that you feel sad seeing his failures. I think kids will love the cute art style, but I don’t see why Yorick has to speak ye olde English. For kids not familiar with old-timey speak, there goes half their enjoyment of the story though I found it charming. ( ) A Shakespearean-era skeleton is unearthed by an active dog and seems to have no sense that time has passed -- or that he is dead. This is meant to be a humorous tale and it certainly has its moments. I was entertained enough for this title but not as much as I wanted to be and not enough to continue with the series. The rambunctious dog nicknamed Bones is quite adorable. Yorick's cluelessness to his skeletal situation requires more suspension of disbelief than I could quite muster up on reading it. I do think it's sweet that the book is the creation of a father-child duo and I am impressed by the teen's commitment to using Shakespearean language. I wonder, however, if a lot of that will just go over the heads of the target audience of relatively young children. When I first began reading this book, I thought it a bit weird, but by the end I was in love. This tale is a charming spoof for younger readers based on a Shakespeare work. The father-daughter team of Jeremy and Hermione Tankard based the book on a doodle (the afterword is a must read explaining this), of a dog threatening to gobble the leg bones of an upset skeleton he just unearthed. This is something Jeremy had been drawing, in one form or another, since he was 7 years old. After years of trying and failing to get the sketches to work as a picture book, Jeremy passed the manuscript off to his daughter, 15 at the time, who rewrote it in Shakespearean verse and produced the script for what would become this fun, endearing graphic novel. “Poor Yorick” wants just two things: a sausage and a friend to share it with. He easily gets a hot dog from a hot dog vendor’s cart but the friendship part is hard to find. Yorick is quite innocent, oblivious and goofy as he and Bones search for a human to play with. Wearing a pair of red pants to cover his nakedness, Yorick doesn’t understand that he is the terrifying talking skeleton from whom everyone is running. When he finally sees his reflection, he utters a variation of Shylock’s famous line from “The Merchant of Venice,” deftly changed to suit his “sorry bones”: “’Tis sure that if you prick me, I’ll bleed not. I think young readers will enjoy the rhythm which is kind of like like a heart that pumps “ba DUM” five times a line. Yorick’s words may sound foreign, but “forsooth” and “alack” are the hardest ones you’ll find. In the final act, when Yorick realizes the friend for whom he’s been looking ever since he was unearthed, is the dog who’s been nipping at his heels all along, his exclamation, “Verily, the air doth cool mine face!” shouted as he throws his own skull for his new pal to fetch. This one is a winner through the precious story and terribly cute illustrations. Yorick, the lamented skull in Shakespeare's Hamlet, is dug from the ground in the present day by a passing dog and walks around scaring people with his iambic pentameter and skeletal form. Did we need a kid's book scripted entirely in iambic pentameter? Wasn't it bad enough when we had to read Stan Lee's original Thor comic book where he doths, haths, and -eths everything? Morality police: Yorick steals without consequence. Quibble police: The author says he decided that Yorick and Hamlet were childhood friends because Shakespeare "doesn't make it clear whether Yorick is a grown-up or not." This despite Hamlet referring to Yorick as a "man," who "hath borne me on his back a thousand times" until his death 23 years previous to the graveyard scene, when a 30-year-old Hamlet would have been seven (or even younger if you care to dispute Hamlet's age). Yorick was the king's court jester, so it seems highly unlikely he was a child peer of Hamlet's. no reviews | add a review
"Yorick is a skeleton who was just dug up after a few hundred years of sleep. He speaks like it too. 'Forsooth, my joy, I barely can contain!' Bones is the hungry dog who did the digging. Though he cannot speak, he can chomp. What will become of these two unlikely companions? Will Yorick ever find the friend he seeks? Will Bones ever find a tasty treat that does not talk back? The course of true friendship never did run smooth."--Provided by publisher. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)741.5The arts Graphic arts and decorative arts Drawing & drawings Cartoons, Caricatures, ComicsLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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