Saturday, May 13, 2017

The Hawk of the Castle: A Story of Medieval Falconry By Danna Smith. Illustrated by Bagram Ibatoulline.40 pp. Candlewick. $16.99. (Picture book; ages 6 to 10)


The Hawk of the Castle: A Story of Medieval Falconry

Sweeping views of a medieval castle and its rural surroundings frame this lyrical look at the ancient sport of falconry. The daughter of a castle falconer narrates as she and her father take their goshawk out to hunt: “This is the arm Father raises just right/ that signals our hawk when it’s time to take flight./ With a stretch of his wings, he flies from the fist/ and soars above the castle.” Though not cumulative, the narrative recalls the rhythmic “The House That Jack Built”; each of Smith’s (Arctic White) four-line stanzas begins with “this is” or “these are” and ends with “the castle.” Ibatoulline’s (The Matchbox Diary) stunningly realistic acrylic and gouache scenes illustrate from all angles, offering close-ups of the hawk, pastoral panoramas, and breathtaking aerial vistas. Small rectangular insets contain factual asides about hawking, and an author’s note gives a brief history of the sport and its traditions. What young readers may appreciate most, though, is the story, beautifully presented, of the bonding between a daughter and father. Ages 4–8. 

Smith’s rhyming story of a medieval girl who learns falconry from her father delivers loads of information about hawking, in the chronicle of a day out hunting and in sidebars about details like the bells on the bird’s legs (to help the falconer find the bird once it’s gotten the prey). Ibatoulline invites you into his sweeping, realistic scenes with cleverly shifting perspectives. But perhaps most thrilling is a book with a castle featuring a girl who’s curious and accomplished, with her social status and marital prospects blissfully beside the point.


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