cover image The Old Pirate of Central Park

The Old Pirate of Central Park

Robert Priest. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (HMH), $16 (32pp) ISBN 978-0-395-90505-0

Like a series of post-modern woodcuts, the fluid lines of Priest's (The Town That Got Out of Town) sleek airbrushed enamel-on-clayboard illustrations unfold in a sequence of color-saturated vignettes that give form and substance to this diverting tale of a retired buccaneer. An ex-pirate, now residing in a New York City apartment and nostalgic for his days as a swashbuckler, builds a model of his old ship, The Laughing Dog, and launches it on the Central Park Sailboat Pond. Soon a retired Queen shows up with her S.S. Uppity Duchess, ""which commenced with utter, reckless, and heedless abandon to race pell-mell around the pond."" A battle for naval supremacy ensues, complete with miniature cannons and tiny cannonballs whose thunder ""reached a crescendo that could be heard all the way to Harlem."" A peace treaty is finally brokered as naptime for the elderly rivals approaches, and the two ""Old Retirates"" agree to share the seas. It's a droll concept that Priest handily executes. He woos readers with a combination of perfectly balanced composition, elegant design and amusing touches, from the pensioned pirate's dapper attire (eyepatch, hook and rakish red cardigan festooned with a nautical design) to a gleeful herd of dogs that break free during the battle and run wild ""after years of being cooped up in tiny apartments."" Timber-shivering fun from start to finish. Ages 4-8. (Mar.)