Night Stories (Toon Latin American Folktales)

by Liniers (Author)

Classic Latin American folktales get an update in this new collection by celebrated author Liniers!

New York Times bestselling author and Eisner Award winner Liniers brings his exuberant cartooning style and irrepressible sense of humor to the spooky folktales of his childhood, telling three from across Latin America: the Iara, a mermaid (or a pink dolphin?) who lures young men to her underwater domain in the Amazon basin; La Lechuza, an enormous owl with the face of a woman, who terrorizes people who venture out after dark (a legend found in Mexico, Chile, and Uruguay); and La Luz Mala, a spooky, evanescent light that menaces gauchos and other travelers on the Argentine pampas.

Liniers animates these thrilling tales with lighthearted twists. Combined with informative backmatter on their ecological, cultural, and historical background and a bibliography, these old stories will come alive for all young readers, from those who have grown up hearing them to those who are encountering them for the first time.

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Kirkus

Spine-tingling, enlightening, and fun.

Publishers Weekly

Following a contextualizing introduction from David Bowles, Liniers (Wildflowers) retells a trio of lightly scary Latin American folktales via this seriocomic graphic novel. In the book's frame story, two bored, wide-awake siblings tell each other frightening tales from their shared bunk bed. The first, "The Mermaid and the Pink Dolphin," finds beauty and danger compelling both a ship's captain who travels the Amazon River and the Iara, or river mermaid, who encounters him. The second story, "The Owl of Doom," brings a child-savvy twist to the Mexican legend of a seven-foot witch-owl who "flies around or sits on a perch looking for people to kill!" And in "The Evil Light," two gauchos on horseback in South America are terrorized by a mysterious light that they perceive as the soul-stealing demon Mandinga. In the artist's well-known art style, delicate ink and watercolor scenes accompany humorous dialogue and text ("The monkey had very little maritime experience"), showcasing the enduring power of folktales and whetting readers' appetites for further tellings. Extensive back matter offers more about the stories' backgrounds. Characters are portrayed with various skin tones. Ages 7-9. (June)

Copyright 2024 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

School Library Journal

Fans of spooky tales will enjoy this graphic novel that features three frightful folk tales, including a shape-shifting mermaid, death-bringing witch owl, and a menacing light. Each tale is crafted from Indigenous traditions of pre-Columbian Mesoamerica. They are brought to life using a whimsical cartoon style that will engage and encourage children to learn about these rich and dynamic folk tales. Sections detailing each legend—the Iara, La Lechuza, and La Luz Mala—feature plenty of cultural and historical details. The author was spurred to create this narrative nonfiction graphic novel because of the lack of materials focusing on Mexican American lore. VERDICT A good graphic novel for young people looking to learn about history and culture in an accessible form.—Meaghan Nichols

Copyright 2024 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes

"On the cover of NIGHT STORIES: Folktales From Latin America...by the Argentine cartoonist Ricardo Liniers Siri, known as Liniers, the 'O' in the title is cleverly replaced by a moon with a furrowed brow. Once an open vowel, once a hole in the word 'stories, ' the worried moon shines on a brother and sister as they tell each other Latin American folk tales from a bunk bed set against a starry sky...The book's introduction, by David Bowles, touches on the Aztecs' and other Nahua people's creation myths, reminding us that sometimes it takes five tries to get a world right. And a treasure trove of back matter in turn explains the origins of Liniers's three 'night stories.' —The New York Times

"An appealing dose of humor, accentuated by Liniers' artwork, full of intricate linework and muted colors [...] spine-tingling, enlightening, and fun." — Kirkus Reviews

"Three frightful folk tales...are brought to life using a whimsical cartoon style that will engage and encourage children to learn about these rich and dynamic folk tales." —School Library Journal

"[...] Delicate ink and watercolor scenes accompany humorous dialogue and text ("The monkey had very little maritime experience"), showcasing the enduring power of folktales and whetting readers' appetites for further tellings." — Publishers Weekly

"Creatively showcases the importance and power of telling and passing stories through generations via oral, textual, and visual narratives." — Horn Book Magazine

"He draws funny!" — Jeff Smith, Bone

​"Liniers' comics are funny and fanciful and whimsical and philosophical in the best sense." — Matt Groening, The Simpsons
Liniers
RICARDO LINIERS SIRI, who uses the pen name Liniers, was born in Argentina. He started his artistic career making fanzines for his friends after he realized he was not made for law school. He is a New York Times bestselling author and the creator of four graphic novels for young readers for TOON Books, including his first children's comics, The Big Wet Balloon, published in 2013, and the Eisner Award-winning Good Night, Planet. Since 2002, Liniers has been writing and drawing the daily strip Macanudo, one of the most celebrated cartoon strips in South America; it has been syndicated in the US since 2018. Liniers and his family currently reside in New England, where he continues to draw Macanudo every day.
Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9781662665301
Lexile Measure
1100
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Toon Books
Publication date
June 04, 2024
Series
Toon Latin American Folktales
BISAC categories
JUV012020 - Juvenile Fiction | Fairy Tales & Folklore | Country & Ethnic - General
JUV012070 - Juvenile Fiction | Legends, Myths, Fables | Caribbean & Latin American
JUV008070 - Juvenile Fiction | Comics & Graphic Novels | Fairy Tales, Folklore, Legends & Mythology
Library of Congress categories
Folklore
Tales
Graphic novels
Latin America
Cartoons and comics

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