I was intrigued by a vague recollection of ‘The Spiderwick
Chronicles’ name as I reached for its dark spine on the rather colourful children’s
bookshelf. The front cover is rich in detailing, from its
variation of glossed and grooved surface to the spindly, curl trimmed typeface
of its title. Holding the petite hardback I felt drawn into the illusion and excitement of possessing a
secret journal, a theme continued inside with a map and two letters,
one written on a typewriter and one by hand. Both mysterious and cautionary.
The story follows the spooky discoveries of Jared
Grace who moves into the creepy dilapidated Spiderwick Estate along with his
mother, his twin Simon and his sister Mallory. His siblings are high achieving
(Mallory being skilled at fencing) and seemingly at peace with themselves
(Simon busily caught up in thoughts of his growing animal collection.) His recent achievement being a bruised
eye from a fight, Jared is left as the black sheep of the family. He is not best pleased to be moving into the decrepit
building but soon strange goings on ignite his curiosity. A secret room, some
frightening pranks and a mysterious journal lead the Graces together to uncover an alarming
discovery. And this is only the
beginning.
I was entranced by this little book and thoroughly look
forward to reading the subsequent sequels. The characters are intriguing and
eccentric, the plot has a growing sense of suspense and mystery and it conjures
an imaginary environment that is both fascinating and spooky. I loved the pen and ink illustrations. Scratchy
yet meticulous sketches, which in my imagination feels as if they were created
in the moment with the greatest of precision and study, in order to document
what would turn out to be a strange unraveling of events. The story is one of a
series with its bite size format leaving you with more than enough pleasure to make
it addictively collectable. Keep an eye out for future posts on The Spiderwick
Chronicle series!
Illustrated by Tony DiTerlizzi and Holly Black. Simon & Schuster (2003)
For more information, please check out: http://pages.simonandschuster.com/spiderwick/
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