H.M. Bouwman is the author of The Remarkable & Very True Story of Lucy & Snowcap (Marshall Cavendish, 2008). An associate professor of English at the University of St. Thomas, she lives in St. Paul, Minnesota, with her two sons. A Crack in the Sea is her second novel. Yuko Shimizu is a Japanese illustrator based in New York City and an instructor at the School of Visual Arts. In 2009, Newsweek Japan chose Yuko as one of the 100 Japanese People the World Respects. Yuko is the illustrator of the picture book Barbed Wire Baseball, and her work can also be seen on Gap T-shirts, Pepsi cans, Visa billboards, and Microsoft and Target ads, as well as on numerous book covers and in the pages of The New York Times, Time, Rolling Stone, The New Yorker and many others. From the Hardcover edition.
Praise for A Crack in the Sea Winter 2016-2017 Kids' Indie Next Pick A Midwest Connections Pick for January 2017 A Maine Student Book Award 2018-2019 Reading List Pick for Grades 4-6 and 4-8 A Sunshine State Young Readers Award Book 2018-2019 List Pick for Grades 6-8 â Through the captivating interwoven tales of these three sibling pairs--and with assistance from Shimizu's powerful ink illustrations--Bouwman crafts a moving narrative about family, magic, morality, the power of storytelling, and the cyclical nature of history. --Publishers Weekly, starred review This novel touches on sensitive and tragic moments in history and gives them fantastical remediation for a provocative, immersive read. --Kirkus Reviews Fans of Grace Lin will love this wholly original book that reads like a fairy tale. A moving and thought-provoking choice for library collections. --School Library Journal A Crack in the Sea is a moving work of conscience and a numinously magical journey. Trust this book. --William Alexander, National Book Award-winning author of Goblin Secrets Bouwman weaves together these stories of freedom and escape with a deep sense of respect and emotion, bringing the reader directly into each family's search for a safety that transcends both time and space. --Booklist Bouwman ably weaves these threads together into a curious, haunting whole that references oppression, family, magic, and a human desperation for safety that transcends time and place. . . . Detailed black and white illustrations invite contemplation and work well to highlight key moments in the novel, adding artistic flair to the already lyrical story. --BCCB Fantasy fans will be drawn into this story and find it hard to put down. --School Library Connection [C]onstantly engaging and enlightening. --BookPage [T]his book will captivate readers who like their fantasy spiced with real-life drama. --Common Sense Media This complex, compelling, and thoughtful novel begins in 1978 on Tathenn, a fantastical island world. . . . Bouwman has done her research well . . . keeping her young characters' journeys--physical and emotional--front and center. Their tenderness, fierceness, bravery, thoughtfulness, and goodness highlight themes of family, leadership, and telling of history. . . . Shimizu's vivid interspersed black-and-white illustrations . . . add to the drama of the storytelling in this original and engrossing book. --The Horn Book