Paperback ©2003 | -- |
Starred Review Jack lives at the Opportunities School for Orphans, where his most cherished possession is a battered dictionary, with the B section missing. When he learns that he will be apprenticed to a firm of bookkeepers, he's ecstatic; he thinks he'll be protecting books. But when the job turns out to be adding numbers (sums, sameness, and scorn is the life of a Ledger lad), he takes off, making a detour at a fair, where everything changes after he spontaneously tells a woman that he sells whims. Soon the somber townsfolk are not only paying for Jack's whims (by gluing little pieces of metal to the soles of your shoes, you can makes music when you dance) but also his concepts, plans, opinions, notions, and fancies. Ellis has created a small gem here, with messages about following your heart tucked into the sentences, phrases, thoughts, and ideas that she seamlessly weaves together. By ingeniously ending each chapter with Jack's dictionary words describing each new circumstance (boldness and bundles . . . that's the life of an ex-bookkeeper), she threads a ribbon through the book that sews together both the joy of language and the vicissitudes of a life of possibilities. St-Aubin's ink-and-wash pictures are not always up to the text, but his jaunty cover art will draw in readers.
Horn BookFor his first twelve years, all spent at the Opportunities School for Orphans and Foundlings, Jack has specialized in staying out of trouble. He's avoided floggings, but, as Ellis shows in this agile tale about wanderlust and the power of words, he also hasn't done much living. Jack runs away and discovers that he's a natural-born "ideas peddler." The book serves as a fanciful example of how a quick mind can take you far.
Kirkus ReviewsA surprising adventure is possible for Jack if he stays true to his heart and to his love of knowledge. Apprenticed to a bookkeeper, Jack daydreams of watching over books, reading books, and keeping books from harm. He is surprised to find that instead of the dream job that he imagined, his days are to be filled with numbers and monotony. He decides to take another future and runs away from the orphanage, finding that he has a gift for creating stories and dreams, even succeeding at making a small living with this gift at a local fair. Clean writing with a subtle humor weaves a tale that will inspire readers to learn new words, even as they laugh along with spirited Jack. Black-and-white ink illustrations pepper the text, offering faces for the amusing characters. In a word—wonderful. (Fiction. 7-10)
School Library JournalGr 3-6-Otherjack is an orphan, so named because another resident at the Opportunities School for Orphans and Foundlings has already claimed the moniker. The boy had 12 years of avoiding floggings and had "melted away from trouble." When Otherjack's "opportunity" arises, he leaves school for the real world, in which many adventures await. The lad, who carries around a battered dictionary and whose passion is language, becomes a bookkeeper's apprentice ("Scholars and scoundrels. Volumes and villains. That will be my life," he thinks). Unhappy, he leaves, and after a series of adventures and misadventures, his true calling becomes clear: he is an "ideas peddler," selling whims, hunches, promises, and intuitions. Finally, he has found success at doing what he does best, and prepares for a life on the road. While the story is slight, there is real strength in Ellis's turns of phrase ("She was so full of herself that she hadn't no room for one more thought"), use of imagery, and alliteration, and in showing readers the power of words and ideas to liberate the imagination.-Sharon Korbeck, Waupaca Area Public Library, WI Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Starred Review ALA Booklist
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Horn Book
Kirkus Reviews
School Library Journal
Wilson's Children's Catalog
Winner of the Mr. Christie's Book Award and the IODE Violet Downey Book Award For young Jack, life is tough at the Opportunities School for Orphans. But Jack is good at staying out of trouble. He has skipped over trouble, danced around trouble, slid under trouble, melted away from trouble, talked his way out of trouble and slipped between two close troubles like a cat through a picket fence. When Jack turns twelve, he is given the biggest opportunity of all, but suddenly his life is nothing but trouble. Still, he is a clever and resilient boy, and eventually he makes his way into the big world. Jack is rich in ideas, and soon he finds there is a place for an enterprising boy who has whims, concepts, plans, opinions, impressions, notions and fancies to spare. In the tradition of Natalie Babbitt, Sarah Ellis brings her quirky sense of humor and imagination to bear in this witty, warm fable. Bruno St-Aubin's evocative black-and-white illustrations capture perfectly the dreadful Schoolmaster Bane, the crowlike accountant Mr. Ledger, Lou the skinny bun merchant, and Christabel, the miller's little daughter.