I have been lucky enough to read and review a wide variety of children's books over the last fifteen years or so. During that time I have really enjoyed seeing how authors and illustrators take on new challenges, and present stories and information in fresh and creative ways. Poetry books in particular have come a long way, and I really look forward to seeing the new titles that come out. In today's poetry title the author uses a series of poems to tell us the story of Miguel Cervantes, the author of Don Quixote. The poems are beautifully written and are accompanied by lovely illustrations.
Miguel’s Brave Knight: Young Cervantes and his Dream of Don Quixote
Miguel’s Brave Knight: Young Cervantes and his Dream of Don Quixote
Margarita Engle
Illustrated by Raul Colon
Historical Fiction Poetry Picture Book
For ages 7 to 10
Peachtree Publishers, 2017, 978-1-56145-856-1
Miguel’s father is a barber surgeon who has a nasty
gambling habit, and he is constantly having money problems. Eventually his
debts are so big that he is thrown into a debtor’s prison. Miguel’s poor mother
loses everything, including hope. She and her children have nothing, and they
have no idea where their next meal will come from. In his empty home, Miguel
takes refuge in his imagination, where a brave knight lives. The knight rides
out on his horse to “right / all the wrongs / of this confusing/ world.”
Mama finds work
and she manages to take care of her family until her husband is released from
prison. Then family then travels from place to place, and sometimes Miguel is
able to attend school. The teacher reads to the children and Miguel wishes that
he too could have a book to read, but books are few and far between, and only the
teachers “are allowed to hold the books.”
Knowing how
precious books are Miguel is horrified when he witnesses a book burning. The
books are being destroyed because they contain imagined stories. Miguel knows
that his knight, the one that is hidden away in is imagination, would “rescue
the flaming pages” if he were real.
Papa gets work
cutting hair and trimming beards, pulling teeth and treating wounds, but he
also continues to gamble and so the family has to move again and again to run
away from debt collectors. During the hard times, when they have to move, and
when the plague comes to the land, Miguel turns to his knight for comfort. The
knight rescues those in dire straits, and dashes to the rescue with his “chubby
friend riding beside him / on a clumsy donkey.”
Despite of his
father’s ways, Miguel manages to learn to read and write in one of the schools
he attends. The boy learns to write his own plays and poems, and when he is
older one of his teachers includes four of Miguel’s poems in a book that is
published.
In this
beautifully illustrated book a series of image-rich poems tells the story of
Miguel Cervantes, and it is easy to see how the idea of Don Quixote might have
grown in Miguel’s imagination when he was a child. He needed to believe in
something good when his own life was so hard and so full of uncertainty.
At the back of
the book readers will further information about Miguel Cervantes and his famous
knight character.
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