What a beautiful book is Brian Selznick’s new graphic novel The Marvels! The cover is gorgeous, all blue and gold. The edges of the pages are gold too. The book is big and fat and heavy. The paper inside is thick and glossy. None of that of course makes a good story but when the story is good, all of it certainly enhances the reading experience.
And what a reading experience it was! The first half of the book is nothing but pencil drawings. No text. But the drawings manage to tell the story of several generations of the Marvel family from how they began in the theatre, made it famous as actors, and then a tragedy the ending of which we do not get to know because the drawings stop and text without drawings begins.
The text tells a different story. Joseph Jervis was sent to boarding school by his parents at a young age. They travelled a lot and found their son difficult and thought boarding school in England would be the best thing for him. They ship him off and rarely bother to call or write to him (it’s 1990). Feeling neglected and lonely, Joseph finally makes a friend, Blink, and they plan to run away together to London where Joseph has an uncle he has never met. But Blink’s dad takes him out of school and Joseph has no idea where they have gone. So, having planned out running away to London already, Joseph gets up his courage and runs off from school at the Christmas break without telling anyone where he is going.
He shows up unannounced at his uncle’s house. Albert Nightingale is himself a lonely man but he prefers it that way. Or at least he has convinced himself he does. He is not pleased at Joseph’s disruptive appearance in the middle of the night in a freezing rain. If the boy wasn’t obviously feverish he would be tempted to leave him out on the street to make his own way as he could. But Albert takes him in. Between Christmas and New Year’s both their lives are changed for the better as Joseph refuses to accept Albert’s silence on their family history.
Are they related to the Marvels? If so, how? Uncle Albert is apparently living in their house, there are clues everywhere and Joseph, along with Frankie, short for Frances, who lives a few houses away, try to put the pieces of the puzzle together.
What we ultimately get is a wonderful story about stories, family, desire, friendship, grief and love. It is all packed in there and even though Selznick writes for a younger audience, he is very subtle on many points and doesn’t slap you in the face with them. For instance Uncle Albert is gay and his partner, Billy died a few years ago of AIDS. And Albert himself is currently being treated for AIDS. But this is not dwelled on except very briefly when Frankie asks Joseph whether he knows Albert is sick. But it doesn’t need to be made more explicit, all the clues are there for anyone paying attention. However, younger readers who know nothing about the AIDS epidemic will very likely miss this aspect of the story.
There is a refrain that runs throughout, Aut visum, but non, you either see it or you don’t. And that is how Selznick has written the book, you either see the clues and put the pieces together or you don’t. By the end it is all crystal clear and I found myself loving every character in the book and wanting a happy ending. But, like Shakespeare’s Winter’s Tale, which weaves its way throughout the story, endings are rarely completely happy or completely sad and often turn into beginnings.
After the text, we go back to just the pencil drawings again that pick up where they left off. This final section is short in relation to all that has come before, but the drawings speak more than words ever could.
Selznick based The Marvels on a real life house and some real life people whose story is as beautiful and touching as the one Selznick wrote. If you liked The Invention of Hugo Cabret and Wonder Struck, you are guaranteed to love The Marvels.
That looks like a very gorgeous book, Stefanie. Is it yours? Endings turning back to beginnings – yes. You’re right. A lot of stories do that – which I suppose is life. The end of one thing usually does turn into the beginning of something else.
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whisperinggums, No, I borrowed it from the library but I was the first to read it because not all of the pages had been separated yet so it was kind of like it was mine 🙂 I do enjoy a story that turns and ending into a beginning, those tend to stay with me longer as I wonder what might happen next.
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I loved Hugo Cabret. I hadn’t heard of this one, though. Can’t wait to see if my library has it. Selznick is amazing.
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Grad, this one is brand new. Hope your library has it!
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I need something to restore my faith in the magic of The Winter’s Tale having seen a screening of the worst production I have ever encountered just before Christmas. This sounds as though it might be exactly the antidote I need and it looks gorgeous too.
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Alex, oh dear. Well maybe this will help since the story kind of takes parts of the play to a personal level.
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I’ve heard slightly mixed things about The Marvels, which has made me nervous to read it — but your review is so glowing! And I do love Brian Selznick for continuing to write these strange, illustrated books. I love it when books try interesting things with words and pictures, like Selznick’s do, and I’d love for there to be more of that in fiction.
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Jenny, I really liked it. You know Selznick doesn’t tend to mix text and illustrations and he continues that here. I love the way he tells a complete story with just the drawings and then there is the mystery of how they connect to the text story. I thought it well done. If you read it I will be interested to hear what you think!
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Wow, this looks gorgeous, i need to check that one out!
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smithereens, it really is beautiful. I hope you get a chance to read it!
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Oh, this sounds great – and how neat that it’s based on the Dennis Severs House! I went there two years ago and loved it, how it is a space that makes room for and encourages paying attention to what you hear and smell as well as what you see.
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Heather, yup. I like how Selznick bases his stories around real places, it really anchors them in a lot of ways. Very cool that you have been to the Severs House, it sounds like an amazing place!
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