Book Descriptions
for Brother Hugo and the Bear by Katy Beebe and S.D. Schindler
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Brother Hugo is a medieval monk with an overdue library book he can’t return: It was eaten by a bear. The Abbot sends him to another monastery to borrow their edition of St. Augustine, and gives him the charge of copying it. It’s a laborious process writing the manuscript out by hand, illuminating the letters, and, finally, sewing the pages together. But his fellow monks help him prepare everything he needs: sheepskin, goose quill pen, the ingredients for different colored inks. Finally the task is complete, and he must return the original to the monks at Grand Chartreuse. But who’s that lumbering along behind him? Katy Beebe provides an engaging and fascinating look into the world of medieval manuscripts in a story delightfully imagined and told.
S. D. Schindler’s wonderfully detailed pen-and-ink illustrations are a perfect fit. Terrific notes illuminate the author’s inspiration and research for the story, and the illustrator’s twenty-first-century process that in many ways, he observes, is not unlike what Brother Hugo might have done hundreds of years before. (Ages 5–9)
S. D. Schindler’s wonderfully detailed pen-and-ink illustrations are a perfect fit. Terrific notes illuminate the author’s inspiration and research for the story, and the illustrator’s twenty-first-century process that in many ways, he observes, is not unlike what Brother Hugo might have done hundreds of years before. (Ages 5–9)
CCBC Choices 2015. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2015. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
Brother Hugo can't return his library book -- the letters of St. Augustine -- because, it turns out, the precious book has been devoured by a bear! Instructed by the abbot to borrow another monastery's copy and create a replacement, the hapless monk painstakingly crafts a new book, copying it letter by letter and line by line. But when he sets off to return the borrowed copy, he finds himself trailed by his hungry new friend. Once a bear has a taste of letters, it appears, he s rarely satisfied!
Brother Hugo and the Bear is loosely based on a note found in a twelfth-century manuscript -- and largely on the creative imaginings of author Katy Beebe. Lavishly illustrated by S. D. Schindler in the style of medieval manuscripts, this humorous tale is sure to delight readers who have acquired their own taste for books.
Brother Hugo and the Bear is loosely based on a note found in a twelfth-century manuscript -- and largely on the creative imaginings of author Katy Beebe. Lavishly illustrated by S. D. Schindler in the style of medieval manuscripts, this humorous tale is sure to delight readers who have acquired their own taste for books.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.