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The Polar Express
The Polar Express
 Pricing & Availability
•  List Price: $18.95
•  Our Price: $14.21  
•  You Save: $4.74 (25%)
•  Availability: Usually ships same day
•  Number In Stock: 5301
 Product Details
•  Written By: Chris Van Allsburg
•  Hardcover: 32 pages
•  Publisher: Houghton Mifflin (October 1985)
•  ISBN-10: 0395389496
•  ISBN-13: 9780395389492
•  In-Print Editions: Hardcover (Houghton Mifflin)
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Publisher's Comments:
A magical train ride on Christmas Eve takes a boy to the North Pole to receive a special gift from Santa Claus.
Late one Christmas Eve after the town has gone to sleep, the boy boards the mysterious train that waits for him: The Polar Express bound for the North Pole. When he arrives, Santa offers the boy any gift he desires. The boy modestly asks for one bell from the harness of a reindeer. The gift is granted. On the way home the bell is lost. On Christmas morning the boy finds the bell under the tree. The mother of the boy admires the bell, but laments that it is broken—for you see, only believers can hear the sound of the bell.
School Library Journal
Gr 1-3. Given a talented and aggressive imagination, even the challenge of as cliche-worn a subject as Santa Claus can be met effectively. Van Allsburg's Polar Express is an old-fashioned steam train that takes children to the North Pole on Christmas Eve to meet the red-suited gentleman and to see him off on his annual sleigh ride. This is a personal retelling of the adult storyteller's adventures as a youngster on that train. The telling is straight, thoughtfully clean-cut and all the more mysterious for its naive directness; the message is only a bit less direct: belief keeps us young at heart. The full-page images are theatrically lit. Colors are muted, edges of forms are fuzzy, scenes are set sparsely, leaving the details to the imagination. The light comes only from windows of buildings and the train or from a moon that's never depicted. Shadows create darkling spaces and model the naturalistic figures of children, wolves, trees, old-fashioned furniture and buildings. Santa Claus and his reindeer seem like so many of the icons bought by parents to decorate yards and rooftops: static, posed with stereotypic gestures. These are scenes from a memory of long ago, a dreamy reconstruction of a symbolic experience, a pleasant remembrance rebuilt to fufill a current wish: if only you believe, you too will hear the ringing of the silver bell that Santa gave him and taste rich hot chocolate in your ride through the wolf-infested forests of reality. Van Allsburg's express train is one in which many of us wish to believe. Kenneth Marantz, Art Education Department, Ohio State University, Columbus.

Reviews:
"The sumptuous pastel effects—train lights seen through falling snow and a vertiginous overhead view, from Santa's sleigh, of his popular city—make this one of Van Allsburg's most treasured visions."
Newsweek
"[T]he pictures may be the best he's done. There is nothing cute here, rather there is something I would have to call majestic."
Noel Perrin, The New York Times Book Review
"The telling is straight, thoughtfully clean-cut and all the more mysterious for its naive directness....The full-page images are theatrically lit....Van Allsburg's express train is one in which many of us wish to believe."
School Library Journal

About the Author:
Chris Van Allsburg is the winner of two Caldecott Medals, for Jumanji and The Polar Express, as well as the recipient of a Caldecott Honor Book for The Garden of Abdul Gasazi. The author and illustrator of numerous picture books for children, he has also been awarded the Regina Medal for lifetime achievement in children's literature. In 1982, Jumanji won the National Book Award and in 1996, it was made into a popular feature film. Chris Van Allsburg was formerly an instructor at the Rhode Island School of Design. He lives in Rhode Island with his wife and two children.
 

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