Storm (novella) explained

Storm
Author:Kevin Crossley-Holland
Illustrator:Alan Marks
Cover Artist:Marks
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Genre:Children's supernatural fiction, ghost story
Publisher:Heinemann
Pub Date:7 August 1985
Media Type:Print (hardcover)
Pages:42 pp (first edition)
Isbn:0-435-00101-9
Oclc:12637640
Congress:PZ7.C88284 St 1989[1]

Storm is a novella and picture book written by Kevin Crossley-Holland, illustrated by Alan Marks, and published by Heinemann in 1985. It was the first children's book for Marks. The story features modern cottagers near a marshland with a renowned ghost. The younger daughter must cross the marsh alone in a family emergency, with telephone service down during a storm,.

Crossley-Holland won the annual Carnegie Medal from the Library Association, recognising the year's outstanding children's book by a British author. For the 70th anniversary of the Medal in 2007, Storm was named one of the top ten winning works, selected by a panel to compose the ballot for a public election of the nation's favourite.

Barron's published a first US and Canadian edition in 1989, retaining the Marks illustrations.[1]

Summaries

"On a wild, stormy night, Annie is offered a ride by a tall, silent horseman. She overcomes her fear of the ghost who is said to haunt the lonely road and accepts the ride—but who is this mysterious stranger?" --library catalogue summary[2] [1]

"Annie knows the secrets of the great marsh. She's even heard about its ghost. On a terrible night, when Annie must brave the storm alone, not even she knows what to expect." --CILIP summary

Audience

In a capsule summary for the 70-year Carnegie celebration (2007), the British librarians recommend Storm for ages six and up. That is an audience two years younger than any others of the anniversary top ten; the recommendations range from ages 6+ to 14+.

Storm is a chapter book, a picture book whose text is considered primary. One recent publisher Egmont (2001)[2] calls its so-called Bananas books"designed for independent reading" by early readers. The more advanced such as Storm are recommended for children making the transition from Key Stage 1 (the first two years of British primary education) to Key Stage 2.[3]

During the 1970s and early 1980s there had been some discussion of the readership served by the Carnegie Medal; some children's librarians had expressed concern that it recognised books for teenage readers almost exclusively. Thus the award to Storm was seen as a move to redress the imbalance.[4] [5] Indeed, published in Heinemann's "Banana Book" line, Storm may be considered the first book for early readers to win the Carnegie Medal.

Significance

Despite the young audience, Storm is not a simple story. The language is deceptively simple: no difficult words are used but the effect is poetic and moving, and the ideas conveyed are anything but simple. Is it a ghost story? Is it a folk legend? Crossley-Holland is a folklore scholar and brings elements of the folk tale, and of the legends of the East Anglian country where he lived at the time, into this 42-page story of Annie and her adventure on a wild stormy night.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://lccn.loc.gov/89000374 "Storm"
  2. http://www.worldcat.org/title/storm/oclc/12637640/editions?start_edition=11&sd=asc&se=yr&referer=di&editionsView=true&fq= "Formats and Editions of Storm"
  3. http://www.egmont.co.uk/bananas/about.asp "About Bananas"
  4. YLG News. Youth Libraries Group. CILIP. Spring 1985.
  5. Book: Allen, Ruth . Winning Books: An Evaluation and History of Major Awards for Children's Books in the English-Speaking World . 2005. 40–49. 978-0954638450.