Glister Butterworth is a curious and clever young girl with an odd little life. She's also the subject of a collection of connected stories written by Watson (
Breakfast After Noon) over the last decade. Her tale begins as children's light fantasy—a shape-shifting house, a talking teapot, and both fairy and literal dust drifting dreamily through the air. However, as Watson expands her protagonist's world, we delve into her family history (an absent mother and a swindling, gambling ancestor) and into the nooks, crannies, and tetchy personality of Chilblain Hall, the youth's English manor house, which quickly becomes the star of the show. The narrative feels a bit fluffed up with twee details at times, but as the stories build one upon the other, the reader becomes delightfully immersed in a veritable labyrinth of familial love and pastoral strangeness. In busy, lightly lined illustrations with amusing detail, and with each vignette in a different color, Watson allows his imagination free rein and invites his audience to embrace their minds' meanderings as well.
VERDICT With gleeful and whimsical appeal for younger readers, and plot elements and winking asides that will also resonate with adults, Glister is a sweet, thoughtful, and intentionally off-kilter light fantasy for all ages.
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