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*Starred Review* Pearson has received well-deserved accl for his Hilda series, and each volume is a
stellar example of sequential storytelling. In this installment, Hilda joins the Sparrow Scouts and sets out to win her
camping badge. Following a lively, humorous montage, she’s finally ready to head off, but once on-site, she is
distracted by a homeless nisse, or house spirit. Every time selfless, brave Hilda tries to help the poor sprite, she
gets in trouble. And that’s not the only problem—a giant black hound has been stalking the Scandinavian city, and soon
there are homeless nisses everywhere. Could the two mysterious occurrences be linked? Hilda seems to be the only one
with the patience and sense of wonder to solve the mystery. In gorgeous, oversize pages filled with warm jewel tones,
Pearson’s varied panel layouts and detailed, purplish backgrounds artfully carry emotional weight and subtle humor in
equal measure. The house spirits are all nose and hair, while the black hound looms as a menacingly large shadow in the
forest. Hilda is, as always, a charming hero, from the top of her blue-haired head to the bottom of her slouchy red
boots. Every volume of this fairy-tale-adventure series is a must-have. Grades 2-5. --Sarah Hunter
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Hilda is coming to Netflix in 2018!
A Publisher’s Weekly Top Illustrated Book, 2012
"Plain smart and moving. John Stanley's Little Lulu meets Miyazaki."
—Guillermo Del Toro
"Pearson’s utter lack of pretension keeps Hilda feeling fresh, while his reading of folktales and Tove Jansson’s Moomin
series embeds Hilda in the long history of children’s stories. […] Hilda’s dilemmas, while fantastic, also feel real […]
Pearson has found a lovely new way to dramatize childhood demons, while also making you long for your own cruise down
the fjords."
—The New Yorker
"[Hilda’s world] is… a glorious, exciting if also rather menacing place — one children will be eager to enter. It’s also
visually arresting: exuberant and lively and faintly Miyazakian"
—The New York Times Book Review
"Hilda is the little girl. And this is her folk tale. And pretty much everything you need to know about how good this is
is there on that absolutely gorgeously delightful cover. By the end of it, you’ll have exactly the same smile as Hilda
has."
—Forbidden Planet
"For adults ... Pearson’s measured storytelling ... and detailed, imaginative artwork make Hilda and the Bird Parade an
absolute treat to dive into. It’s hard to imagine a better all-ages comic will be published this year."
—Slate
"very enjoyable, it's imaginative and fun for kids and adults too!"
—Renata Liewska, author of bestselling The Quiet Book
"If you know a young comics reader, or a a child that you’d like to turn into a comics reader – especially if they love
fairy-tale-like stories – this would be a great place to start them. Hilda isn’t a superhero, but she sure saves the
day."
—Erica Friedman for Okazu
"Pearson’s whimsical artwork—a cross between Lucky Luke and Miyazaki—creates a magical spell of a mysterious world of
hidden creatures, and the production of the book make it a treasure in itself. The story—comparable to the Adventures of
Polo series by Regis Faller and Copper by Kazu Kibuishi—never s in imagination or wonder"
—Publisher’s Weekly, Starred Review
"A wonderful tale of love, success, and loss"
—City Stacks Books & Coffee
"I think I loved this one even more than the first."
—Changing Hands
"I can't wait to read more about Hilda."
—Kim Haddox,Amarillo Public Library
"If you haven't heard of Luke Pearson, buddy, you have been hiding under a particularly uninteresting rock this past
year."
—The Comics Bureau
"If what you’re looking for is great storytelling, humour, adventure and imagination then what are you waiting for? Come
on in, the water’s fine."
—The Illustrated Forest
"Midnight Giant is sad, but packs probably the most weighty punch of the series as far as real-life lessons for kids.
[…] It’s less a moral about transitioning from childhood to adulthood than it is about a transition from the naiveté of
early childhood (Santa Claus, anyone?) into the more realistic stages of later childhood. It’s also about what matters
most — possessions or people?"
—Comics Alliance
"Wonderful characters and story. A pure delight to read!"
—Nicola Mansfield
"A graceful, surefooted, graphically beautiful fantasy comic, blending Pearson's Chris Ware/Kevin Huizenga-like formal
interests with an easy, assured evocation of a quietly fantastic world. Sly, charming, full of small surprises, and
lovingly cartooned, with terrific body language and some startling pages, Hilda is the real deal: a confection with
purpose. Subtle moral ins come gift-wrapped in deadpan absurdities; Gulliverian problems of scale (little people,
big people, really big people) are cleverly worked out; and the design, production values, and color palette are
mesmerizing. In short, a wonderful object and a wonderful story."
—Charles Hatfield
"Pearson's latest comic, the spell-binding contemporary fairytale Hildafolk, feels just as at home in publisher Nobrow
Press' visually intelligent catalogue as it does between good old fashioned yarns like and The Adventures of Tintin
in my bookcase."
—Avoid the Future
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