From School Library Journal
Grade 6 Up–Using the story of a country girl and her brother hunting for their mother in the maze of Mexico City in 1940 as a framework, Hill introduces the tempestuous life and art of Frida Kahlo, who befriends the children. The book is deftly written with keen attention to characterization and setting; the author lovingly describes the sights and sounds of both rural and urban Mexico. Fourteen-year-old Maria Ortiz and her younger brother, Victor, as well as ancillary characters like Fulang the monkey and Chica the cat are rendered in believable terms (although believable only goes so far when some of the protagonists are talking animals). Indeed, comic personalities like these and a sentient sugar skull allow readers to identify more easily with Kahlo's complex world. Despite some incredulous plotting (Frida and Diego Rivera, recently divorced, reuniting to foil a diamond heist!), Hill's short art-history novel accomplishes with style what it is meant to do–offer an introduction to a solitary, difficult person.–Steev Baker, Kewaskum Public Library, WI
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Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Booklist
Gr. 7-10. Two lost kids on the streets of Mexico City find a home with the great artist Frida Kahlo in her house, Casa Azul, a place not only safe but also magic, and they enter her world as she sees it. In the spirit of Kahlo's life and art, the magical realism is both playful and dark. Kahlo believes everything talks--the cat, a hummingbird, a monkey, a skull, the portraits on her walls. They argue, protect her, and worry about her suicidal depression and her passionate, on-and-off relationship with Diego Rivera. But for all the story about the two children, what will hold readers is the jargon-free talk about Kahlo's work, focusing on the surrealist self-portrait on the jacket, in which she's surrounded by all kinds of creatures and has a dead hummingbird hanging from her necklace. A useful biography and a time line provide the bare facts, and Hill also quotes Kahlo about "the rich magic of a painting" compared with the limits of a photograph. A book that raises many exciting questions about art and truth. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Children's Literature, May, 2005
"Highly recommended to introduce the sophisticated young reader to this fascinating artist."
Book Description
Frida Kahlos work comes to lifeliterallyin this magical realist novel, the latest addition to Watson-Guptills acclaimed Art Encounters series. The story alternates between Kahlos home in Mexico City, Casa Azul, and the journey of a teenage girl and her young brother, lost in the city. At the mystical Casa Azul, everything with a face talksincluding Kahlos pet monkey, her cat, portraits on the wall. Over the course of the book, the cover painting Self-Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird, transforms from a nightmarish vision of death into a life-affirming masterpiece. This dramatic story offers a vivid reimagining of the life and work of a woman as well known for her amazing life as for her amazing art.