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Polar Express

Written By: Chris Van Allsburg
List Price: $18.95
Availability: Usually ships within 24 hours
Product Details
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Company
Date Published: July 1985
Format: hardcover
Pages: 32 pages
Ages: 5 to 8
Reviews:
FROM THE PUBLISHER
Late one Christmas Eve after the town has gone to sleep, the boy boards the
mysterious train that waits for him: The Polar Express bound for the North Pole.
When he arrives, Santa offers the boy any gift he desires. The boy modestly asks
for one bell from the harness of a reindeer. The gift is granted. On the way
home the bell is lost. On Christmas morning the boy finds the bell under the
tree. The mother of the boy admires the bell, but laments that it is broken—for
you see, only believers can hear the sound of the bell.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publisher's Weekly
Several treasured titles make a comeback as reissues. In preparation for the
November release of the book-based film starring Tom Hanks, Houghton has reshot
the artwork for the 1986 Caldecott Medal- winning The Polar Express by Chris Van
Allsburg, sprucing up this perennial holiday favorite.
Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
School Library Journal
Gr 1-3 Given a talented and aggressive imagination, even the challenge of as
cliche-worn a subject as Santa Claus can be met effectively. Van Allsburg's
Polar Express is an old-fashioned steam train that takes children to the North
Pole on Christmas Eve to meet the red-suited gentleman and to see him off on his
annual sleigh ride. This is a personal retelling of the adult storyteller's
adventures as a youngster on that train. The telling is straight, thoughtfully
clean-cut and all the more mysterious for its naive directness; the message is
only a bit less direct: belief keeps us young at heart. The full-page images are
theatrically lit. Colors are muted, edges of forms are fuzzy, scenes are set
sparsely, leaving the details to the imagination. The light comes only from
windows of buildings and the train or from a moon that's never depicted. Shadows
create darkling spaces and model the naturalistic figures of children, wolves,
trees, old-fashioned furniture and buildings. Santa Claus and his reindeer seem
like so many of the icons bought by parents to decorate yards and rooftops:
static, posed with stereotypic gestures. These are scenes from a memory of long
ago, a dreamy reconstruction of a symbolic experience, a pleasant remembrance
rebuilt to fufill a current wish: if only you believe, you too will hear the
ringing of the silver bell that Santa gave him and taste rich hot chocolate in
your ride through the wolf-infested forests of reality. Van Allsburg's express
train is one in which many of us wish to believe.
Kenneth Marantz, Art Education Department, Ohio State University, Columbus
Awards:
1986 Caldecott Medal Winner