12 Oct 2018

THE HOUSE WITH CHICKEN LEGS.

THE HOUSE WITH CHICKEN LEGS by SOPHIE ANDERSON (Illustrated by Elisa Paganelli , the cover by Melissa Castrillon).

Marinka dreams of a normal life, where her house stays in one place long enough for her to make friends. But her house has chicken legs and moves on without warning.



For Marinka's grandmother is Baba Yaga, who guides spirits between this world and the next. Marinka longs to change her destiny and sets out to break free from her grandmother's footsteps, but her house has other ideas...
- Back Cover Blurb



I light the candles in the skulls at dusk.
- First Sentence; Guiding The Dead


I don't even notice The Gate is open until the man rises to his feet and helps his wife to hers, and they hobble slowly towards it. 

'What do take with you to the stars?' I ask, suddenly remembering my role in all this, rushing to pour the spirit trost.

'The warmth of companionship.' The woman smiles and the man nods in agreement. They drink the trost, kiss my cheeks, and hold hands as they step through The Gate together.

The death journey words flow from my mouth as they drift into the blackness.

- Memorable Moment; Page 147

SOURCE ... One of several books purchased with a gift voucher from Waterstones.

READ FOR A CHALLENGE? ... No.

MY THOUGHTS ... Only vaguely aware of the Russian folk story that is Baba Yaga thus I came to this telling by Sophie Anderson with no preconceptions.

A middle grade read or Key Stage KS2/3E so ideally suited to those aged 8 to 11 OR 9+ respectively. Not that I'd let this put you off if, like myself, you happen to be a, err, more mature reader who just so happens to enjoy folklore no matter what its intended audience. And as for those younger, perhaps more sensitive readers? Well, as an adult you may well want to check the book out first (as if you'd need an excuse) as though very much life affirming, there is no getting away from the fact that there is the underlying theme of death and dying. That said ... I can think of worse ways of introducing the subject.

Anyway,

The cover, eye catching; the story telling, both spell-binding, thought provoking, bittersweet; the characters (yes, even the house itself), memorable; the world building, spot on; the illustrations, sublime. Way up there as one of my favourite reads of 2018, I'd even go as far as to place it in my top 3; there's just something so special about this book, something that makes me want to shout about it from the roof tops.


Not convinced? Read an extract here.


6 comments:

Kelly said...

How bizarre! I've never heard this folktale before and the whole concept of a house on chicken legs is wild! Death is part of life, so I don't think it should ever be shied away from, especially with children. They understand far more than many adults give them credit for.

I'm glad you enjoyed it so much.

Felicity Grace Terry said...

As someone for whom death and funerals in particular were taboo I wholeheartedly agree Kelly.

nightwingsraven said...

Tracy,
Even though I still struggle
with sadness I agree with Kelly
about life and death.
And yout enthusiastic review
definitely convinced me to add
this book to my list.
Raven

DMS said...

I don't know anything about this folktale (that I know of). The cover, title, and your awesome review all have me curious about the book. Sounds fascinating and I love MG books. Awesome that you loved this one so much!
~Jess

Suko said...

Wow, this sounds wonderful, Tracy! I'm intrigued. Your review is convincing.

Karen said...

I read a YA about Baba Yaga. It was a pretty intense lol

I love this cover though.

Karen @ For What It's Worth