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POPPY
AND RYE, by Avi
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Ages 8 to 12
HarperCollins Publishers
Horn Book:
In Poppy, the eponymous mouse heroine lost her first love, Ragweed,
and now she is journeying to tell his family of his unfortunate fate.
Accompanying Poppy on her expedition is Ereth the porcupine-grumpy, smelly,
foul-mouthed, and hostile to change, but a good friend under duress. Poppy
meets a charming golden mouse who looks like Ragweed, and who in fact
is later revealed to be his younger brother, Rye. When Poppy finds Ragweed's
family, they are in the midst of a crisis: beavers have flooded their
brook, forcing them to move, and even their new home is under threat.
The beavers are led by Mr. Caster B. Canad, a sly takeoff on the slick-talking,
amoral businessman, the master of cliché, who promises everything
but gives nothing ("a stranger is just a friend you haven't met.
And I mean that, sincerely"). After Rye is captured by the beavers
and trapped inside their lodge, Poppy leads an expedition to save him,
and his family, galvanized by Poppy's bravery, plans to destroy the dam.
The final desperate and one-sided battle of mice vs. beavers is decided
by the sudden appearance of Ereth, whose quills even the beavers fear.
The happy ending has a slight undertone of sadness, as Ereth, a misanthropist
to the core, realizes that he loves Poppy, a thought so distasteful that
he complains bitterly, "Love... Nothing but slug splat stew and toad
jam. Phooey." The anthropomorphic characterization is spot-on: Ereth;
Rye, chafing in the shadow of his older brother; Valerian, Rye's father,
who will remind some readers of Father in Robert Lawson's Rabbit Hill.
Accompanied once again by Brian Floca's witty yet pastoral pencil drawings,
this is a sequel worthy of its predecessor.
Publishers Weekly:
The spirited mouse star from Poppy must now face life after Ragweed
(her fiance who was killed by an owl). Poppy and her curmudgeonly porcupine
friend Ereth leave Dimwood Forest in search of Ragweed's parents to tell
them the sad news so that Poppy can "get on with her life."
When they finally reach their destination, they discover it's hardly the
"dullsville" that Ragweed had described. In fact, his family
has been forced to leave their comfortable nest and move to higher ground:
a clan of development-mad beavers are flooding out the residents in their
efforts to turn the pastoral backwater into "Canad's Cute Condos."
Along the way, Poppy encounters Ragweed's dreamy, poetic brother Rye,
and before long the two mice are head over paws in love. When a showdown
between the scheming beavers and the reluctantly heroic mice puts Rye
in danger, Poppy risks everything to save him. Of course, all's well that
ends well in this rollicking tale, which Avi infuses with generous helpings
of adventure, romance and humor. He juggles multiple story lines effortlessly,
and his characterizations are particularly engaging, from the blustering
Caster P. Canad ("Bless my teeth and smooth my tail!"), head
of the beaver coterie, to the smart-mouthed Ereth ("Look here, you
pickle-tailed fur booger"). This thoroughly enjoyable sequel is sure
to please old fans and will likely win some new ones.
School Library Journal:
This novel tells the story, as promised in the final pages of Poppy,
of how the courageous deer mouse met and married her husband Rye. Picking
up Poppy's story after her victory over Mr. Ocax the owl, Avi chronicles
her quest to find her late fiancé's family and tell them of his
death in Mr. Ocax's claws. The couple meet early in her journey, but their
growing love is temporarily thwarted by Rye's imprisonment within the
lodge of cliché-spouting, indefatigably eager beavers. He is also
hindered by his fears that he can't live up to Poppy's memories of Ragweed,
who was Rye's sometimes admired, sometimes despised older brother. Unfortunately,
the mouse's conflicting feelings about his brother are never clearly resolved,
and Rye remains a less-developed character than Poppy, whose growth from
timid to brave is one of the previous book's chief delights. Poppy and
Rye also loses steam during a distracting subplot featuring Ereth the
porcupine's cranky (and unrequited) love for Poppy, but it will still
appeal to fans of the first book. Beth Wright.
Booklist:
In this sequel to Poppy, a Youth Editors' Choice '95, the intrepid
deer mouse Poppy persuades her curmudgeonly porcupine friend Ereth to
accompany her on a trek to tell Ragweed's family how her beloved golden
mouse had met an untimely death. Although Ereth grumbles his way west,
the pair eventually reach "The Brook," where the golden mouse
family lives, only to discover that the family has been forced to move
because the brook has been dammed by beavers ("Canad and Co. 'Progress
Without Pain,' that's our motto"), and the mouse family's home has
been flooded. With Poppy's planning and help, the golden mice manage to
defeat the beavers, driving them away and breaking the dam. In the process,
Poppy and Rye, Ragweed's brother, fall in love. The battle against the
beavers is exciting: Rye is captured sneaking into the beavers' lodge
and held prisoner; Poppy makes her way by raft to the lodge and enters
through a vent hole and almost drowns as she escapes. As he took on the
politics of power in Poppy, Avi here tackles the advance of progress for
the sake of progress, no matter the consequences. With the exception of
Poppy and Ereth, characters lack the fine development of those in the
first book, but Poppy's fans will welcome her return and cheer her on
in her new adventure. Sally Estes.
Children's Literature:
A tale of mice and beavers, this one is a winner because the characters
are so sympathetically portrayed. The second in a series finds Poppy,
a golden mouse, on a journey to inform her former fiancé's family
of his death. Poppy had been very much in love with Ragweed, and feels
very strongly about communicating with his family. But the trip will be
long and dangerous, and she wants company. She manages to talk her friend
Ereth, a porcupine, into accompanying her. Ereth has a rather acerbic
personality, and agrees to go only reluctantly. Guided by the little she
knows of the location of Ragweed's family, Poppy eventually stumbles onto
a familiar face and it's full steam ahead with adventure and romance.
The beavers have invaded the brook, and Poppy will be involved in not
only helping the grieving mouse family deal with their loss, but also
with securing their future. This story makes great reading aloud. Kristin
Harris.
VOYA:
Fans of Avi's Poppy will find this sequel an entertaining read.
As readers of the first story will remember, Poppy was determined to find
the family of her deceased fiancé Ragweed and let them know of
his death. Poppy and Rye details Poppy's journey to the home
of Ragweed's parents with her irascible porcupine friend Ereth. Avi delivers
a romantic adventure to his audience when Poppy finds herself falling
in love with Ragweed's younger brother Rye while at the same time helping
his family survive the encroachment of a band of industrious beavers.
The beavers are led by Caster P. Canad, who tosses mottoes and slogans
around in the same manner that Ereth spews his opinions. Canad's "progress
without pain" campaign to dam The Brook where the golden mice live
leaves Rye's family fighting to survive as their home and resources are
flooded. Poppy and Rye use their wits and bravely defend the rights of
the golden mice to maintain their home against the more powerful beaver
population. The fast-paced and dramatic fight for survival against the
beavers provides a climax young readers will enjoy. Fans of Ereth's alliterative
mutterings will not be disappointed either as Avi, once again, has the
porcupine spouting some hilarious expressions. Readers waiting for the
answers as to how Poppy and Rye met will be satisfied here. Maura
Bresnahan.
Click
here to visit Avi's web site.
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