
All combine to give us a chillingly memorable portrait of one child surviving violence and loss in a time of war.įrom the March/April 2014 issue of The Horn Book Magazine. When Carlos first encounters Paco, the rebel soldier his own age, their meeting is described in a poignant mirror poem. Carlos’ family and other villagers are introduced in early poems, including. Set in Chopán in 1981, this verse novel follows the life of Carlos, old enough to feed the chickens but not old enough to wring their necks as the story opens. Layered and varied, some are shape poems some can be read in more than one way, as if written from two perspectives and all are accessible to young readers. The horrors of the Guatemalan civil war are filtered through the eyes of a boy coming of age. The poems, all written from Carlos’s point of view, are emotional, visceral, and lyrical. Wracked with survivor’s guilt, Carlos begins to walk - caminar - on a mission to reach his grandmother’s village at the top of the mountain, to warn them about the helicopters. They confirm his greatest fears - that Chopán was burned to the ground, and that the people there were massacred by the government soldiers. Welcome to the 2014 edition of The New York Public Librarys 100 Titles for. When all is quiet, he climbs down from his tree and soon comes across a group of four guerrilla rebel soldiers, lost in the forest. collections at The New York Public Library. When the government helicopters appear over the small village of Chopán, young Carlos obeys his mother when she tells him to go into the forest to hide. Echoed. / I heard a path I could not see.” Exquisitely crafted poems are the basis of an unusually fine verse novel set in 1981, in the middle of the Guatemalan Civil War. “Forest sounds / all around / but on the ground / the sound / of Me / grew.
