Witch Hazel
Molly Idle. Little, Brown, $18.99 (40p) ISBN 978-0-316-54113-8
Working in expressive white and graphite lines on warm brown paper, Caldecott Honoree Idle draws Hazel, an elderly woman in a cape and a pointed hat, and Hilda, a girl clad in overalls, throughout the seasons. As Hazel and Hilda sweep the front porch one spring day—the paper background provides the characters’ skin tone—Hazel shares a remembrance of herself as a girl. Using swooping, balletic curves, Idle renders Hazel’s memories via lively, misty white images that unfold in and around the present-day duo: a young Hazel practices flying on her swing, a copy of Peter Pan in her hand. In the summer, Hazel, now shown in memory as a young woman, frees a songbird: “I loved him too much to keep him in a cage.” And in the fall, a more adult Hazel in a splendid ball gown and live boa swirls and twirls. By winter, though, Hazel has taken to her bed, and soon becomes a solace-offering memory herself. The story’s fantasy elements add little more than aesthetic to this tale of intergenerational love, but its attention to memory and loss tenderly shows how the capacity to tell stories is passed on. Ages 4–8. Agent: Steven Malk, Writers House. (Oct.)
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Reviewed on: 07/21/2022
Genre: Children's