Anna and the Swallow Man
Material type:
- 9781782300533
- YA/F/GAV
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo Children's Area | YA/F/GAV |
Available
Order online |
Blue Tag (YA Collection) | CA00025314 | |||
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Kandy Children's Area | YA/F/GAV | Checked out | 30/10/2024 | YB144776 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
Anna and the Swallow Man is a stunning, literary, and wholly original debut novel that tells a new WW2 story.
Kraków, 1939, is no place to grow up. There are a million marching soldiers and a thousand barking dogs. And Anna Lania is just seven years old when the Germans take her father and suddenly, sheâe(tm)s alone.
Then she meets the Swallow Man. He is a mystery, strange and tall. And like Anna's missing father, he has a gift for languages: Polish, Russian, German, Yiddish, even Bird. When he summons a bright, beautiful swallow down to his hand to stop her from crying, Anna is entranced.
Over the course of their travels together, Anna and the Swallow Man will dodge bombs, tame soldiers, and even, despite their better judgement, make a friend. But in a world gone mad, everything can prove dangerous . . .
Excerpt provided by Syndetics
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Publishers Weekly Review
Anna is seven years old when the Nazis come for her linguistics professor father. In 1939 Poland, many children are left orphaned or are taken to concentration camps, but Anna finds refuge of a sort by traveling with a tall, thin man, who communicates with birds and speaks in metaphors. Anna and the Swallow Man speak in Polish, German, Russian, Yiddish, and French. Reader Corduner performs these lines with the lightest of accents, flavoring the story and never overwhelming the listener. Corduner's gentle tone of voice makes young Anna come alive without resorting to high-pitched breathiness. His Swallow Man is mysterious but also comforting, setting up great tension in the story. In his quiet yet firm manner, the Swallow Man teaches Anna lessons of survival, some of which challenge her instincts to be honest and compassionate. Corduner handles the story deftly, simply letting Savit's words do the work and never hamming it up in his performance. This book is more than simple historical fiction; it is almost a fable about how to live in hard times. Corduner's performance is also more than simple narration-it is remarkable. Ages 12-up. A Knopf hardcover. (Jan.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.School Library Journal Review
Gr 8 Up-It is 1939, and seven-year-old Anna lives with her father, a professor of linguistics, in Krakow. Anna finds herself alone after her father is summoned to a meeting by the Gestapo and does not return. She befriends a strange man who is able to talk to birds, hence the nickname the Swallow Man. Anna and the Swallow Man wander the countryside for four years, careful to avoid largely populated areas. The Swallow Man is a mystery to Anna and the listeners alike-the author never quite reveals why he is living in hiding. The story is beautifully told, and, despite the often dark subject matter, Allan Corduner's voice is soothing. Though it is set during the Holocaust, the book does not draw upon the historical content in too much detail. Still, it could be used as part of a historical unit to discuss different points of view. VERDICT It is important to note that teens are the intended audience-though the protagonist is young, the story can be disturbing and too violent for children closer to the character's age. Recommended for YA collections. ["More interpretive than literal, the story will generate discussion among YA readers": SLJ 12/15 review of the Knopf book.]-Betsy Davison, State University of New York at Cortland © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Booklist Review
In 1939, seven-year-old Anna's father, a linguistics professor in Krakow, disappears, along with 150 other academics. Parentless, she must find an adult to care for her, and thanks to her precocious, quick thinking, she convinces a willowy, enigmatic stranger to let her travel with him. Savit lyrically and languidly narrates the following years as Anna and the stranger, whom she calls the Swallow Man, peripatetically wander the Polish countryside, keeping to themselves and subsisting on whatever they can forage. Before long, the dangers of the Nazi occupation and the atrocities of the Holocaust become impossible to ignore, and when they add a Jewish musician to their traveling band, the Swallow Man faces difficult questions how far will he go to protect Anna? And how far will he go to protect his own identity? Full of sophisticated questions and advanced vocabulary, Savit's debut occasionally feels like an adult novel, but young readers with the patience for his gauzy pacing and oblique plot turns will be rewarded by a moving, thought-provoking story about coming-of-age in the midst of trauma.--Hunter, Sarah Copyright 2015 BooklistHorn Book Review
In 1939 Krakow, Poland, seven-year-old Anna is left orphaned after her father, a linguistics professor, is taken by the Nazis. Confused and frightened, but pragmatic, she follows a mysterious man, tall and exceedingly thinwhom she meets on the street and who seems to have the power to communicate with birdsout of the city and toward an unknown destination. As they walk, and as days become months, then years, the Swallow Man teaches Anna life lessons and survival skills in the form of aphorisms (Asking a stranger for something is the easiest way to assure that he will not give it. Much better simply to show him a friend with a need) and metaphors (Those [soldiers] look like young men, dont they? But theyre not. The ones from the westthose are wolves. And the ones from the east are bearsand if they can find a reason to hurt you, they will). Then Anna finds a man in the woods, a Jewish man who is a musician and who joins their little familyfor a time. The third-person narrativelyrical, fluid, with a pervasive shadow of menacelends a folkloric feel to a graceful story steeped in history, magic, myth, and archetype; comparisons to The Book Thief (rev. 3/06) are apt regarding writing style, themes, and intended audience beyond the protagonists years. The book leaves readers with many questions, not least of which are: Who is the Swallow Man? What is he? As the Swallow Mans words remind us in the epilogue: Questions, Annaquestions are far more valuable than answers. elissa gershowitz (c) Copyright 2016. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Kirkus Book Review
After a young girl is left to fend for herself in World War II Poland, she stumbles upon an intriguing gentleman who she hopes will guide her out of the emerging chaos of war. Anna Lania is 7 at the start of this multiyear tale with its overtones of folklore and magical realism. Her linguistics-professor father is taken away by the Germans during the expulsion of intellectuals at Jagiellonian University in Krakow. A linguist herself, Anna is drawn to the language abilities and bird savvy of the Swallow Man, so named to preserve his anonymity. As they make their way together across Poland, the Swallow Man has ingenious ways of explaining their new realities to Anna via storytelling while his real activities remain an enigma until the end. Most striking here is that debut author Savit creates a young girl's world that only consists of father figuresand it is not always clear how Anna is to determine whom to trust and whether or not these relationships and how she thinks of them are ultimately safe. The eventual conclusion: human connection, however brief or imperfect, has the potential to save us all. Artful, original, insightful. (Historical fiction. 12 up) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.There are no comments on this title.