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Starred Review Fleischman and Sís, whose previous collaborations include The Whipping Boy (1986), a Newbery Medal winner, join forces again in this fanciful, original tale drawn from Mexican lore. A dream-stealing creature used to lasso sleepers' nightmares, but he's burned out on monster wrangling and has begun to steal more pleasant images instead. His latest target is a young girl, Susana, who is heartsick after her best friend, Consuelo Louisa, moves away. Susana is delighted when she dreams of a happy horseback-riding excursion with her friend, but she wakes abruptly. Why did the dream end? Susana brings her worries to her grandmother, who tells her that the Dream Stealer is the likely cause. Susana cleverly traps the beast and convinces him to bring her to his castle, where she can retrieve the rest of her dream. While this tale lacks the solid framework and rich depth of some of Fleischman's previous winners, the range of imaginative inventions, from the cast of dream-conjured creatures to the Dream Stealer's firefly storage system, will delight children, as will the narrator's expertly modulated storyteller's cadence. Sís' black-and-white illustrations include inventive design elements that reinforce the sense of real and imagined worlds overlapping.
Horn BookAn omniscient narrator describes eight-year-old Susana's encounters with the nightmare-capturing Dream Stealer. As the creature grows weary of his mission, he starts collecting happy dreams. Through fluid prose and vivid, often weird imagery, Fleischman maintains the story's dreamlike state. The tale, abstract at times, is well served by Sis's textured black-and-white illustrations, which help readers visualize the strange creatures and settings.
Kirkus ReviewsSo slender and slight it feels light enough to float from your hands, Fleischman and Sis's latest chapter-book collaboration supplements their previous Newbery-winning pairing, The Whipping Boy (1987). Lonely little Susana desperately misses her old best friend, who recently moved away from their small Mexican town. Worse still, when she has a dream that seems to show her friend in danger, Susana finds it immediately stolen by the magical, rude, chili-chomping Dream Stealer. Incensed, Susana insists on being reunited with her dream. So begins a journey to the Dream Stealer's castle, as well as a run-in with a couple of nightmarish characters who have vowed revenge against their colorful captor. The author breathes life into this Mexican-flavored world with a storytelling manner that's teasing and intriguing by turns. This good-natured whimsy is complemented beautifully by the one-of-a-kind pen-and-ink drawings. Sweet and silly, consider this slim bedtime fare that lingers long after the tale is told. (Fantasy. 6-11)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)The duo behind the 1987 Newbery winner, <EMPHASIS TYPE=""ITALIC"">The Whipping Boy, reunites for this whimsical tale that mixes fantasy and reality to heal a broken friendship. Susana fights with her best friend just before Consuelo Louisa moves to Guadalajara. Lonely and sad, Susana dreams of a happy reunion, but her reverie is interrupted when the Dream Stealer—charged with rounding up monsters and demons from nightmares so people can sleep—makes off with the blissful scene. Determined to get her dream back, clever Susana traps the Dream Stealer and forces him to fly her to the castle where the botherations he's lassoed from dreams are kept under lock and key. Fleischman's rich prose and understated humor make for easy reading; the loss of a friend, a magical journey to set things right and an empowered heroine are emotionally right on target for the audience. Sís's full-page b&w drawings often render Susana incongruously passive, but his depictions of the rest of Fleischman's oddball cast are livelier and the overall effect is a handsome package. Ages 9–up. <EMPHASIS TYPE=""ITALIC"">(Sept.)
School Library JournalGr 2-5 Basing a story on a carved Mexican figure, Fleischman weaves a short tale around a Dream Stealer, Zumpango, who perches outside windows waiting to snitch nightmares from sleeping children. Scared by some of the critters he has lassoed, he starts taking happy dreams. But he hasn't reckoned with Susana, who wants back her interrupted dream of a happy reunion with a friend with whom she has had a fight. She tricks Zumpango into flying her to his lair to take back the dream. There she faces down and outfoxes the nightmare creatures (some borrowed from folktales) and agrees to be Zumpango's new friend if he will leave her good dreams alone. When she is returned home, a phone call from her old friend provides a cheerful end. Sís's ink drawings feature just the right mix of surreal, funny, scary, and reassuring images (but sharp readers will note that while the text has the Dream Stealer escaping an ogre feet first through a narrow window, the illustration shows him stuck head first). Set within a loving Spanish family, the tale twinkles with Fleischman's signature crisp language and laugh-out-loud wordplay. All in all, it's a quick, unique read that's sure to give young chapter-book readers shivers, laughs, and satisfaction. Susan Hepler, formerly at Burgundy Farm Country Day School, Alexandria, VA
Starred Review ALA Booklist
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Horn Book
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal
Wilson's Children's Catalog
Chapter One
Muchachos and muchachas, boys and girls, do you know what happened to the fearless little girl who lives in the pink stucco house behind the plaza? Fearless, but lonely. Lonely, but plucky. Do you believe in marvels?
After a long, hot day, the sun dropped behind a prickly clump of cactus without scratching itself. Then a warm night fell over the Mexican town, soft as velvet, with stars flashing like fireflies.
Bedroom windows were flung open to the evening air. Soon it would be time for Susana to go to bed. Yes, that was her name. Susana. With one n. Eight years old.
Unknown to her, Susana had a night visitor. Outside, a great bird with big feet was flying in as silently as an owl. It circled the pink house.
After a long journey, the strange creature came to rest on a limb of the old pepper tree in the patio of Susana's house.
A bird, did I say? Yes and no. Its wings and feathers flashed orange and red polka dots like bloodshot eyes—and green spots and purple ones, too. You'd think the night visitor had the allover measles. Now, think of teeth as sharp as broken crockery. And a full moon of a face, with cunning eyes protruding like a frog's.
An ogre? A monster? What could it be, hanging in the pepper tree like a great piñata?
I'll tell you. Be patient.
The Dream Stealer. Copyright © by Sid Fleischman . Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.
Excerpted from The Dream Stealer by Sid Fleischman
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
What would you do to rescue your most precious dream?
Susana’s best friend moved away, and now the only time Susana can see her is in her dreams. Until one night when the dream suddenly ends. The Dream Stealer has come, her grandmother says. The Dream Stealer does not want pretty silver earrings or dangly gold necklaces, diamonds or rubies. He wants dreams. He’s supposed to take only nightmares, but he’s grown scared of the monsters and phantoms. He’s been stealing good dreams instead. But he’s stolen from the wrong girl.
Susana is clever. She is fearless. And she wants her dream back.