The Skull (Canadian Edition): A Tyrolean Folktale

Jon Klassen
Illustrated by Jon Klassen
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The Skull (Canadian Edition): A Tyrolean Folktale

Jon Klassen
Illustrated by Jon Klassen
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Found in: Chapter Books ages 6-8, General 6-8

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Overview

STAFF PICKCANADIAN6-8 YEARS112 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details

Overall rating: 4.735849 / 5 from 53 reviews.

AI Generated Review Summary

The Skull, a Canadian Edition Tyrolean folktale by Jon Klassen, captivates readers with its gorgeous illustrations, unique story, and empowering themes. Lauded for its macabre yet delightful narrative, the book is a Governor General's Literary Award Finalist and a #1 New York Times bestseller.

Summary topics

  • Book Quality: 49%
  • Story Quality: 31%
  • Illustration Quality: 25%

Review topics: [artwork, book, illustrations, story, read, kids, pictures, tale, children, written, future, chapters, klassen].

Review highlights

  • "I loved this little book - both the story and the illustrations."Kathleen
  • "I purchased this book simply for the beautiful illustrations."1UP P.
  • "Simply a sweet little story with wonderful graphics"Geekgrrl

Reviews

Love it . .

"One if the best books that I have ever read :)"

Areej (5/5)

Spooky, Funny, Great Read

"This book was magnificent! Perfectly spooky and deadpan funny. Great read for early readers branching into chapter books. Perfect for end of grade 1 or grade 2!"

Squiresn (5/5)

A bit weird and dark. . .

"This is a weird one. A small child is running away from an unknown antagonist, and finds a house in the forest with a skull. The skull's skeleton body shows up every night and chases the skull who explains in the vaguest of terms that he does not want to get caught. The girl tricks the skeleton body, dismantles the bones, crushes them up, burns them in a fire, and throws the ashes down a bottomless pit. The child and skull live together happily ever after. I told you it was weird. The whole book is vague in details. Having said that, my child enjoyed it. The illustrations throughout are engaging, and the author includes an afterward explaining his reason/inspiration for writing it (it's based on his memory of a folktale he read) so it was a good conversation to have with my child about memories, inspiration, and folktales. Overall a weird, but enjoyed book."

Reviewer (4/5)

5 stars, for the right audience

"I thought this was really cool, especially the art style. The story went in a direction I wasn't really expecting, but I thought it was interesting. That said, I was expecting something more like a graphic novel, and it's more of a picture book, so for an adult it's a bit short. For some younger kids, it might be kind of intense, but it's also the sort of thing that kids might not think is as scary as parents think they will think it is. There are some aspects that I think a parent or teacher might want to discuss: what does this mean, what might be happening, etc. So it might not be the best as just standalone entertainment."

James D. (5/5)

Not too spooky book for children

"Excellent spooky book for young children. It’s not too scary and the reader level is perfect for year olds."

Nicole (5/5)

Great book!

"My kids loved it and I appreciated it. The illustrations are beautiful as well."

Jmlucu (5/5)

So pretty

"This book is beautifully illustrated and the story is charming and odd. The pace is slow, which was great for us. I read this over a few evenings as a bedtime story with my almost 5 year old."

Jordan M. (4/5)

Great for young readers

"My second grader loves this book, including the drawings and the storyline. She's read this one a few times now."

Michelle (4/5)

Thought provoking a bit too dark for us.

"Beautiful but also a kid running away and burning bones… and everything is okay. I feel like there should be more context of why the kid is running away. I feel like it’s about kindness and afterlife conclusion, a kid capable of helping but it’s not really a world I want my kid to step into."

Rebecca (2/5)

An Interesting Read For A Kid's Book

"My niece actually picked - out this book and I was not sure how i felt about it. Its an interesting read and not at all what you expect. It is a children's book; however, I feel like it has more adult meanings to it. I gave it a 5 since my niece loved it."

Deana (5/5)

Q&A

  • Appropriate for: Ages 6-8 Years
  • Published date: Jul 11, 2023
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 112
  • Publisher: Candlewick Press
  • ISBN: 9781536223378
  • Dimensions: 6.31" W x 0.64" L x 8.31" H
"Klassen has once again crafted a book that is among the best."
—Quill & Quire (starred review)

Folk tales are meant to be flexible things, open-source stories infinitely moldable to the needs of teller and era. That’s the wonder of them — and of “The Skull,” an old Tyrolean yarn distilled to its droll essentials and marvelously reimagined by the Caldecott medalist (and national treasure) Jon Klassen. . . The pared-back, ocher-tinted illustrations are well suited to the folk-tale form, and pair perfectly with Klassen’s deceptively simple storytelling.
—The New York Times Book Review

Caldecott medalist Klassen’s signature style is brought to bear on a Tyrolean tale imbued with equal parts comfort and creepiness. . . . One can only hope that children will tell and retell this reinterpretation many times to themselves throughout the years. Employing his customary pitch-perfect tonal gymnastics, only Klassen could inspire readers to want craniums as pals.
—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

Echoes of other forbidding fairy tales pervade this high-stakes telling, in which Otilla’s primal bravery and sly wit result in an arc from flight to mutual reliance.
—Publishers Weekly (starred review)

Klassen’s recognizable graphite-and-ink illustrations capture the haunting—yet somehow charming—atmosphere of the stark Austrian setting, where shadows loom, bones come to life, and apricot sunshine cuts through the gloom. . . . Is the story creepy? You bet, but it’s also weirdly sweet and characterized by agency, kindness, and choice. . . . Klassen's newest offering will be highly coveted.
—Booklist (starred review)

Klassen has proved especially good at introducing new, often solo, young readers to the unsettling but intriguing place where fear becomes an essential narrative element, offering enough humor and absurdity to provide comfort on the journey. Such is the case with The Skull, a reimagining of a Tyrolean folktale that shows a young girl’s resolve against unnamed, unexplained threats. . . . the book offers a lesson on the usefulness of fear and likely a reminder of what kids already suspect: the world can be awful and scary, but empathy and friendship can arise from its darkest places.
—The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books (starred review)

Unflappable Otilla and the unfailingly polite skull make for odd but exemplary companions in this well-paced tale. . . . illustrated in classic, deadpan Klassen style with speckled art that’s both mesmerizing and dryly hilarious. The dark tones of the art are warmed by slants of peach-hued winter sunlight; like the scary-funny story, darkness and light work in tandem ­surprisingly well.
—The Horn Book (starred review)

Readers can enjoy a quick read, the implementation of interesting literary elements, and the humor that we have come to know from Klassen.
—School Library Connection

[A] droll and delicious tale. . . Any disquiet that children ages 6-10 might harbor about a talking skull will dissipate in the light of the skull’s friendly attitude and gracious manners.
—The Wall Street Journal

Gifted author-illustrator Jon Klassen offers a wonderfully eerie version of an old folktale, illustrated with his distinctive somber graphite and ink artwork in black and white and muted tones of sepia, rose and blue and printed in large type with short chapters that should appeal to beginning readers.
—The Buffalo News

Jon Klassen brings his droll humor and just the right amount of spine-tingling creepiness to this retelling of a Tyrolean folktale. . . . Klassen uses his spare text to great effect and the mostly monochromatic illustrations provide just the right eerie echo. This is a book sure to be read over and over and over again. Even the most reluctant reader will be eager to keep these pages turning.
—The New York Journal of Books

This delightfully dark picture book retells a Tyrolean folk tale of the same name. . . . This is a longer-than-average picture book — much like Klassen’s previous picture book The Rock from the Sky — with Klassen’s trademark dark humor. . . . Fairy tale and horror readers of all ages will love it.
—Book Riot
Jon Klassen is the #1 New York Times bestselling creator of I Want My Hat Back (a Theodor Seuss Geisel Honor Book) and its companions, We Found a Hat and This Is Not My Hat (a Caldecott Medal and Kate Greenaway Medal winner), as well as The Skull, The Rock from the Sky, The House with Nobody in It, and the Your Places and Your Things board book series. He is also the illustrator of numerous children’s books, including Sam and Dave Dig a Hole and Extra Yarn (both Caldecott Honor Books), Triangle, Square, and Circle, all by Mac Barnett; House Held Up by Trees by Ted Kooser; and the Pax series by Sara Pennypacker. Originally from Ontario, Canada, Jon Klassen is a member of the Order of Canada for his contributions to children’s literature. He now lives in Los Angeles.

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