Doll Bones

Doll Bones

Dust jacket of the hard-cover edition showing the Newbery Medallion.
Author Holly Black
Illustrator Eliza Wheeler
Country United States
Language English
Genre Young Adult Fiction, Fantasy, Gothic Fiction
Publisher McElderry Books, Scholastic Corporation
Publication date
2013
Media type Print
Pages 244 pp
ISBN 9781416963981

Doll Bones is a 2013 Young Adult novel by author Holly Black with illustrations by Eliza Wheeler. Doll Bones won the Mythopoeic Fantasy Award in Children's Literature and was a Newbery Medal Honor Book in 2014.[1][2]

Plot

Doll Bones is the story of Zachary "Zach" Barlow, Alice Magnaye, and Poppy Bell's quest to return a haunted doll to its proper grave site in another town. Zach, Alice, and Poppy play a role-playing game with informal rules using action figures and paper cut-outs. Poppy runs the game which involves Zach's character "William the Blade" and Alice's character "Lady Jayne" on a quest for the Great Queen aboard William's sailing ship, Neptune's Pearl. One day Zach discovers that his father has thrown out all of his action figures including William, effectively ending the game. Furious at his father, and embarrassed that he cares so much about a "kid's game", Zach decides not to tell Alice and Poppy what happened and instead says he just does not want to play anymore.

Zach is woken in the middle of the night by Alice and Poppy who tell him that Poppy has had a dream that the "Great Queen" (an antique doll her mother keeps locked in a glass cabinet that the kids use for the game) and that the doll is made from the bones and ashes of a dead girl named Eleanor Kerchner who is now a ghost and wants to be returned to her proper grave. The three kids leave notes for their parents and take a night bus to East Liverpool, Ohio (a few hour's bus ride away) hoping to return the following evening to avoid discovery. On the bus they are accosted by a man named Tinshoe Jones who seems to see the doll as a real person and warns them that the bus driver talks with aliens who "change people faces". The bus makes a stop in East Rochester, PA and the children flee when it appears the bus driver and station attendant intend to capture them.

They spend the night in a small park near the Ohio river and during the night their meager supplies are inexplicably torn apart and ruined. They enter a donut shop with exotic flavored donuts and the shopkeeper offers the "hungry blond girl" (the doll) a Pepto Bismol flavored donut. They argue about the quest, but, still hoping to catch the bus back home in time, decide to continue the quest if possible by walking to East Liverpool. The quest seems to end, however, when they find themselves on the banks of a tributary river flowing into the Ohio. Alice is ready to return home, but Poppy, realizing both Alice and Zach have secrets, blackmails them into continuing the quest. They steal a small sailboat named "Pearl" and clumsily sail their way to East Liverpool. Angry, wet, disheartened, and now late for the bus, the three argue again and Poppy reveals that Alice loves Zach and wants to date him.

Now angry and awkward, they enter town and find a diner where the attendant also seems to see the doll as a person. They find a map of town and break into the closed library where they research the cemetery and inadvertently spend the night when they all fall asleep. They are woken by Miss Katherine, a young, pink-haired librarian who locks them in a break room and makes them call their respective parents and guardians. The doll, however, is missing, and they resolve to break free, find the doll, and complete the quest. Zach finds the doll in a ladies' restroom in the basement near a display of Lukas Kerchner's exotic pottery and learns about Eleanor's father and her mysterious disappearance.

Fleeing the librarian the children steal two bikes and go to the cemetery where they look in vain for the willow tree that should mark the grave. Frustrated, Zach tells the girls the truth about the action figures and runs off into the cemetery where he lies down and sobs uncontrollably. The girls find him sitting by the stone of the Kerchner family which has a willow carved into it. They bury the doll and then walk to meet their respective guardians at the gate to the cemetery while promising to one another to keep the Story alive.

Characters

Critical reception

Many critics found Doll Bones to be a strong work. Barry Goldblatt and Jennifer Rofe, writing for Publisher's Weekly, assert that "Black captures the adolescent sense that things are about to explode before they get explained. And it's a darn good adventure, too".[3] Writing of the audio book, Lolly Gibson calls Doll Bones "A bit of a creepy riff on Toy Story with a gruesome Sweeny Todd subplot, this powerful story will hold listener's interest".[4] Some critics, however, were less impressed, but still found merit in the book. As Cynthia Ritter of Horn Book Magazine writes, "The narrative is uneven: while the doll is believably creepy, the horror elements and the ghost story remain under-developed, as do Poppy and Alice's characters, and the resolution is rather abrupt. But through Zach's complex perspective, author Black poignantly and realistically captures how adolescence inherently brings change; how growing up affects the ways children play; and the inevitable tests friendships face".[5]

Awards

See also

References

  1. "Newbery Honor and Medal Books". ALSC. Association for Library Service to Children. 2014.
  2. "Mythopoeic Awards – 2014". Mythopoeic Awards. 2014.
  3. Goldblatt, Barry and Jennifer Rofe. Review. Publisher's Weekly (25 March 2013): 70.
  4. Gepson, Lolly. Review. Booklist (1 Sept. 2013): 94.
  5. Ritter, Cynthia. Review. Horn Book Magazine (Jul/Aug 2013): 122-123.
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