Hurry - Only 3 left in stock!
|
Walker Bean never wanted to be a high-seas pirate waging a pitched battle against the forces of the deep. It just worked out that way.
Mild, meek, and a little geeky, Walker is always happiest in his grandfather's workshop, messing around with his inventions. But when his beloved grandfather is struck by an ancient curse, it falls on Walker to return an accursed pearl skull to the witches who created it--and his path will be strewn with pirates, magical machines, ancient lore, and deadly peril.
Author/illustrator Aaron Renier brings everything he has to this swashbuckling adventure story. Drawing from sources as disparate as Tintin, Treasure Island, and Harry Potter, Renier has woven together a breathless tale that will leave readers' ears ringing from the cannon-shot and their eyes dazzled from the glowing stares of sea-witches.
Walker Bean never wanted to be a high-seas pirate waging a pitched battle against the forces of the deep. It just worked out that way.
Mild, meek, and a little geeky, Walker is always happiest in his grandfather's workshop, messing around with his inventions. But when his beloved grandfather is struck by an ancient curse, it falls on Walker to return an accursed pearl skull to the witches who created it--and his path will be strewn with pirates, magical machines, ancient lore, and deadly peril.
Author/illustrator Aaron Renier brings everything he has to this swashbuckling adventure story. Drawing from sources as disparate as Tintin, Treasure Island, and Harry Potter, Renier has woven together a breathless tale that will leave readers' ears ringing from the cannon-shot and their eyes dazzled from the glowing stares of sea-witches.
Aaron Renier's illustrations have appeared in a wide variety of places, including an entire city bus--turning it into a moving aquarium. His first graphic novel is Spiral Bound; The Unsinkable Walker Bean is his second. He lives in Chicago.
"Be prepared. You're going to love it." --Brian Selznick "Aaron's
work makes me feel ten years old again. " --Lane Smith "Outrageous
and wonderful!" --Jeff Smith "At first glance, this graphic novel
looks like a mishmash of time-honored seafaring fantasy-adventure
tropes: ancient curses with vague hints of Atlantis and a lost
treasure; pirates more loveable than rascally pitted against greedy
starched-shirt colonial naval types; and of course the outwardly
meek but plucky-under-fire boy hero. But while Renier certainly
hits all of those notes, he isn't content to simply let the story
coast once under way--which takes only a panel or two to get
cracking. Instead, he keeps throwing newer and neater elements into
the fray. The excitement centers around a cursed skull stolen from
the lair of two deep-sea crustacean witches. Like all who look upon
the skull, Walker's beloved Grandpa falls deathly ill when he finds
it, and the boy sets out to return the skull from whence it came.
In two of the more impressively clever feats, the inventive lad
turns a pirate ship into a proto-all-terrain vehicle and uses an
enormous blank canvas to recreate the night sky, subverting the
navigational course of the ship. The generous page size lets
readers dive into Renier's quavery and painstakingly detailed
cartooning, and he really shows off his stuff with a bounty of
full-splash dazzlers. Though a smidge light on characterization,
this comic really is just about everything you want from a
rip-roaring adventure: exciting, deep, funny, and scary, with
tremendous villains and valor galore." --Booklist, Starred Review
"Anyone who has said that pirates are an overused motif in youth
literature has not yet met Walker Bean. Legends of Atlantis,
merwitches and pirates abound in this stunningly swashbuckling
graphic novel. Young Walker Bean, overlooked by his father, adores
his fanciful grandfather and the yarns he spins about his
adventures on the high seas. On his deathbed, his grandfather asks
him to return an enchanted skull to a remote island. A fantastic
adventure ensues, replete with pirates, naval officers and
horrifying lobster merwitches out to apprehend Walker and the
skull. A lushly eye-catching palette strides in easy harmony with
this whimsical--though substantial--narrative. Renier and colorist
Alec Longstreth work within a contained 75-color palette, achieving
their goal of a unified feel throughout. In lesser hands this could
have easily been labeled another trite "chosen one" adventure tale,
but the masterful writing and art flawlessly transcend any
predictable genre constraints. An easy crowd pleaser, this book has
something sure to enchant every reader. Three cheers for Walker
Bean...long may he sail!" --Kirkus, Starred Review "Throughout his
childhood, pudgy, bespectacled Walker Bean has listened to his
grandfather's tales of adventure on the open seas. Now Walker finds
himself smack-dab in the middle of his own thrilling escapade when
his ailing grandfather asks him to return a human skull to a trench
deep in the ocean floor. Once part of a skeleton of a witch's
enemy, this skull has now been transformed into pearl. Armed with
his grandfather's journal, an amazing message bottle, assistance
from a few trusted friends, and his own clever and inventive mind,
Walker braves pirates, evil witches, and his own fears in this tale
of derring-do and skullduggery. Renier's tale is a youngster's
dream: adventure with a capital A. The graphic art moves the story
along with excellent page layout and a brilliant color palette that
serve as fireworks, lighting up the pages with cannon muzzle blasts
and ships ablaze. Clever writing, though sometimes a little
convoluted for young readers, is filled with humor and puns.
Readers should be prepared to suspend all logic and ties to
reality. They will find a ship with a garden complete with large
fruit trees and a gardener who practices composting onboard. The
crew uses matches and employs phrases such as "Holy Guacamole." But
for those who are ready to lay aside these concerns for a while and
take off with Walker in an adventure of a lifetime, this is an
exciting choice." --School Library Journal, Starred Review "This
rip-roaring tale of swashbuckling adventure from the Eisner
Award-winning Renier offers up a story line and art of equally
intriguing depth. It is colonial times, and Walker Bean must help
his grandfather, who's been cursed by a pair of witchy undersea
lobster-women named Tartessa and Remora, by returning a magical
skull to the mysterious Mango Islands. Stowing away on a ship,
Walker teams up with a dog named Perrogi (obviously drawn with the
affection of a dog lover), a boy named Shiv, and a tough-talking
girl named Genoa. Renier's dynamic drawings are rich in detail;
readers will get lost in the winding streets of colonial towns,
island hideaways, natural history collections, exuberant panoramas
of action. Renier lets his imagination lead the way, throwing maps
and illustrated clues throughout this seafaring world, and setting
up all manner of surprises and danger for Walker." --Publisher's
Weekly, starred review "Walker's grandfather falls ill after
returning from sea with a cursed skull belonging to the merwitch
sisters, Tartessa and Remora. Walker's father is determined to sell
the rare skull because he does not believe his father's story about
how the sisters destroyed the city of Atlantis. Walker's
grandfather convinces Walker that he must take the skull aboard his
father's ship and direct the ship towards the Mango Islands where
the skull can be returned to the sisters. Walker, a timid and
anxious young man, is an unlikely nominee for this job, but he is
determined to save his beloved grandfather and has his
grandfather's flair for invention. Pirates seize the skull at the
outset of the assignment and Walker finds himself aboard another
ship where he meets Genoa and Shiv who vow to help him complete his
mission. After the monstrous sisters attack the ship, the three
young adventurers decide they must outsmart the corrupt pirates.
Walker creates the plans to reset the ship's course in the evenings
in the direction of the Mango Islands.
Although this graphic novel may be more likely to attract male
readers, Genoa has enough gumption to engage female teens that give
this book a try. Readers will find themselves stopping to closely
examine the detailed drawings that illustrate the action aboard the
ship, especially the full-page illustrations. The palette used by
colorist Alec Longstreth beautifully complements the setting and
tone of this suspense-filled high seas adventure. This magical tale
invites readers aboard the ship with the heroes, allowing readers
to share in their triumph." --VOYA "If you think deep-water oil
spills are scary, wait 'til you see the soul-entrapping skulls and
lobster-like merwitches lurking near the Atlantic Ocean vents in
this graphic novel. Admiral Bean, wasting away with an unnamed
illness, is currently in possession of one of these skulls, and he
commands his son, captain of the Ticonderoga, to commit it to the
trench where it belongs. He has good reason, though, to mistrust
his son, who's in cahoots with mysterious Dr. Patches and a host of
drunken naval officers to sell the skull, so Admiral Bean charges
his pudgy, bespectacled grandson Walker to go along and oversee the
task. The bagged skull rapidly changes hands as Walker, his father,
Dr. Patches, a shipful of pirates, an obese antiquities dealer, and
the merwitches themselves chase each other around the ocean,
one-upping one another with their dastardly ploys and cunning
counter-strategies. Renier concocts a frenetic adventure story and
a visual feast, with a Tintin-esque look to the cast, Where's
Waldo? detailing in the splash pages, a complete refit of political
geography, inventions that straddle Disney and steampunk, marine
creatures from a Seussian nightmare, and a wry propensity for
anachronism and wordplay. By story's end the merwitches have been
appeased, but there's still a lost family to be found, Dr. Patches
is probably on the loose (now with eight legs instead of two), and
Walker is far away from home. Let's hope we're not stranded in port
too long before Volume Two sets sail." --BCCB
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |