"Jim Heynen's delightful new collection of stories, The Youngest Boy, is filled with scenes and sketches that will make you laugh and then sigh. Just as the exquisite illustrations by Tom Pohrt are both beautifully concise and emotionally open, so Jim's stories offer multi-layered and multiple ways of reading. The eponymous Youngest Boy is a wonderful combination of trickster, super-hero, and PR spokesperson. As a farm kid myself, I identified with the boy's tender negotiations with the reality of farm life: he knows life on the farm is made of beauty and grit; he's seen a calf being born, a chicken being bullied, and he knows how to deal with the condescension of town kids and the harassment of older boys. By the time we get to the end of the book, we understand that a 'beautiful world' is one that includes the calf who has learned to avoid the electric fence and the crow feasting on the side of the road. 'What a beautiful world' the youngest boy says to himself, and readers will be telling each other: what a beautiful book!"--Joyce Sutphen, Minnesota State Poet Laureate
"When I reached the last page of The Youngest Boy, I found myself in awe that such a slender book could contain so much life. Jim Heynen's prose is always dazzling and precise. Here, with deceptive simplicity--accompanied by Tom Pohrt's amusing drawings --Heynen has drawn an evocative, mesmerizing portrait of human warmth, camaraderie, and love." David Biespiel, author of A Place of Exodus: Home, Memory, and Texas
"Jim Heynen left his family's Iowa farm for the wide world many years ago, but the farm never left his mind. And from that mind comes a parade of winsome stories about this mythic little hero, the youngest boy--often ignored by the elders, plucky and expendable, constantly courting trouble, curious, tirelessly industrious in his shenanigans, and ever alive to the unfolding creation of farm life. Readers will relish the close attention this boy brings to everything he touches as resident inspector of the intricate ordinary lives of animals, crops, customs, secrets, and treasures of enigma lost and found. He's a kind of Huck drifting through the seasons, an unruly seed in good earth."--Kim Stafford, author of Singer Come from Afar
"In a series of nostalgic snapshots, Jim Heynen returns to the rural midwest, a land of cornfields, haymows, farm auctions, newborn pigs, eccentric adults and daydreaming children. The Youngest Boy is a playful, poignant, vivid, funny book.--Julie Schumacher, author of Dear Committee Members and The Shakespeauore Requirement