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Hugo Cabret,这个住在巴黎火车站巨墙内的孤儿,靠着社会救济金和行窃,勉强过日。但他看似简陋而清苦的生活,其实却隐藏了一个极大的秘密。但这个秘密,却无意间被火车站的玩具零售商和一个热爱书籍的小女孩发现了。Hugo该怎么做,才能不让他隐藏的身份被揭露呢?而他的真实身份又是什么呢?这本New York Times童书最佳销售排行榜上,连续十周让哈利波特也敬陪末座的魔幻故事,结合了绘本和小说的两种特性,超过三百页的连续插画,让整本书看起来像是部小型的动画电影,生动地将这个少年的魔幻人生呈现出来。
Book Description
Orphan, clock keeper, and thief, Hugo lives in the walls of a busy Paris train station, where his survival depends on secrets and anonymity. But when his world suddenly interlocks with an eccentric, bookish girl and a bitter old man who runs a toy booth in the station, Hugo's undercover life, and his most precious secret, are put in jeopardy. A cryptic drawing, a treasured notebook, a stolen key, a mechanical man, and a hidden message from Hugo's dead father form the backbone of this intricate, tender, and spellbinding mystery.
Amazon.com Exclusive
A Letter from Brian Selznick
Dear readers,
When I was a kid, two of my favorite books were by an amazing man named Remy Charlip. Fortunately and Thirteen fascinated me in part because, in both books, the very act of turning the pages plays a pivotal role in telling the story. Each turn reveals something new in a way that builds on the image on the previous page. Now that I’m an illustrator myself, I’ve often thought about this dramatic storytelling device and all of its creative possibilities.
My new book, The Invention of Hugo Cabret, is a 550 page novel in words and pictures. But unlike most novels, the images in my new book don't just illustrate the story; they help tell it. I've used the lessons I learned from Remy Charlip and other masters of the picture book to create something that is not a exactly a novel, not quite a picture book, not really a graphic novel, or a flip book or a movie, but a combination of all these things.
I began thinking about this book ten years ago after seeing some of the magical films of Georges Méliès, the father of science-fiction movies. But it wasn’t until I read a book called Edison's Eve: The Quest for Mechanical Life by Gaby Woods that my story began to come into focus. I discovered that Méliès had a collection of mechanical, wind-up figures (called automata) that were donated to a museum, but which were later destroyed and thrown away. Instantly, I imagined a boy discovering these broken, rusty machines in the garbage, stealing one and attempting to fix it. At that moment, Hugo Cabret was born.
A few years ago, I had the honor of meeting Remy Charlip, and I'm proud to say that we've become friends. Last December he was asking me what I was working on, and as I was describing this book to him, I realized that Remy looks exactly like Georges Méliès. I excitedly asked him to pose as the character in my book, and fortunately, he said yes. So every time you see Méliès in The Invention of Hugo Cabret, the person you are really looking at is my dear friend Remy Charlip, who continues to inspire everyone who has the great pleasure of knowing him or seeing his work.
Paris in the 1930's, a thief, a broken machine, a strange girl, a mean old man, and the secrets that tie them all together... Welcome to The Invention of Hugo Cabret.
Yours,
Brian Selznick
Amazon.com Exclusive
Brian Selznick on a "Deleted Scene" from The Invention of Hugo Cabret
This is a finished drawing that I had to cut from The Invention of Hugo Cabret. I was still rewriting the book when I had to begin the final art. There was originally a scene in the story where this character, Etienne, is working in a camera shop. On one of my research trips to Paris I spent an entire day visiting old camera shops and photographing cameras from the 1930's and earlier, as well as the facades of the shops themselves. I researched original French camera posters and made sure that the counter and the shelves were accurate to the time period. I did all the drawings in the book at 1/4 scale, so they were very small and I often had to use a magnifying glass to help me see what I was drawing. After I finished this drawing I continued to rewrite, and for various reasons I realized that I needed to move this scene from the camera shop to the French Film Academy, which meant that I had to cut this picture. I tried really hard to find ANOTHER moment when I could have Etienne in a camera shop, but, as painful as it was, I knew the picture had to go. I'm glad to see it up on the Amazon website because otherwise no one would have ever seen all those tiny cameras I researched and drew so carefully!
--Brian Selznick
Illustrations
From Publishers Weekly
Here is a true masterpiece—an artful blending of narrative, illustration and cinematic technique, for a story as tantalizing as it is touching.Twelve-year-old orphan Hugo lives in the walls of a Paris train station at the turn of the 20th century, where he tends to the clocks and filches what he needs to survive. Hugo's recently deceased father, a clockmaker, worked in a museum where he discovered an automaton: a human-like figure seated at a desk, pen in hand, as if ready to deliver a message. After his father showed Hugo the robot, the boy became just as obsessed with getting the automaton to function as his father had been, and the man gave his son one of the notebooks he used to record the automaton's inner workings. The plot grows as intricate as the robot's gears and mechanisms [...] To Selznick's credit, the coincidences all feel carefully orchestrated; epiphany after epiphany occurs before the book comes to its sumptuous, glorious end. Selznick hints at the toymaker's hidden identity [...] through impressive use of meticulous charcoal drawings that grow or shrink against black backdrops, in pages-long sequences. They display the same item in increasingly tight focus or pan across scenes the way a camera might. The plot ultimately has much to do with the history of the movies, and Selznick's genius lies in his expert use of such a visual style to spotlight the role of this highly visual media. A standout achievement. Ages 9-12. (Mar.)
From School Library Journal
Grade 4–9—With characteristic intelligence, exquisite images, and a breathtaking design, Selznick shatters conventions related to the art of bookmaking in this magical mystery set in 1930s Paris. He employs wordless sequential pictures and distinct pages of text to let the cinematic story unfold, and the artwork, rendered in pencil and bordered in black, contains elements of a flip book, a graphic novel, and film. It opens with a small square depicting a full moon centered on a black spread. As readers flip the pages, the image grows and the moon recedes. A boy on the run slips through a grate to take refuge inside the walls of a train station—home for this orphaned, apprentice clock keeper. As Hugo seeks to accomplish his mission, his life intersects with a cantankerous toyshop owner and a feisty girl who won't be ignored. Each character possesses secrets and something of great value to the other. With deft foreshadowing, sensitively wrought characters, and heart-pounding suspense, the author engineers the elements of his complex plot: speeding trains, clocks, footsteps, dreams, and movies—especially those by Georges Méliès, the French pioneer of science-fiction cinema. Movie stills are cleverly interspersed. Selznick's art ranges from evocative, shadowy spreads of Parisian streets to penetrating character close-ups. Leaving much to ponder about loss, time, family, and the creative impulse, the book closes with a waning moon, a diminishing square, and informative credits. This is a masterful narrative that readers can literally manipulate.
—Wendy Lukehart, Washington DC Public Library
From Booklist
Selznick's "novel in words and pictures," an intriguing mystery set in 1930s Paris about an orphan, a salvaged clockwork invention, and a celebrated filmmaker, resuscitates an anemic genre--the illustrated novel--and takes it to a whole new level. The result is somewhat similar to a graphic novel, but experiencing its mix of silvery pencil drawings and narrative interludes is ultimately more akin to watching a silent film. Indeed, movies and the wonder they inspire, "like seeing dreams in the middle of the day," are central to the story, and Selznick expresses an obvious passion for cinema in ways both visual (successive pictures, set against black frames as if projected on a darkened screen, mimic slow zooms and dramatic cuts) and thematic (the convoluted plot involves director Georges M'eli'es, particularly his fanciful 1902 masterpiece, A Trip to the Moon .) This hybrid creation, which also includes movie stills and archival photographs, is surprising and often lovely, but the orphan's story is overshadowed by the book's artistic and historical concerns (the heady extent of which are revealed in concluding notes about Selznick's inspirations, from the Lumi'ere brothers to Fran'eois Truffaut). Nonetheless, bookmaking this ambitious demands and deserves attention--which it will surely receive from children attracted by a novel in which a complex narrative is equally advanced by things both read and seen.
Jennifer Mattson
From AudioFile
Inside a Paris train station in 1932, a small boy named Hugo Cabret secretly keeps all the clocks running. Like the workings of a clock, the parts of this intriguing story interlock, and the audio program is a marvel in itself. Jeff Woodman narrates Hugo's story, which introduces listeners to an automaton, a mechanical figure that writes and draws, and the early science fiction films of Georges M?li?s. Woodman clearly captures Hugo and his friends as they try to discover the secrets of an old man. Sound sequences are placed within the narrative where in the print edition of the book a series of illustrations occurs. A bonus DVD accompanies the set, and it's a dynamic "extra." The disc contains not just a filmed interview with Selznick, in which he talks about his writing and illustration process, but also images of the actual illustrations. This wholly original integration of audio narration, soundscapes, illustration, and author discussion is an experience listeners of all ages should not miss. Discovering how the intricate puzzle of elements fits together like clockwork will provide repeated listenings to figure out. R.F.W. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award
Book Dimension
length: (cm)21.3 width:(cm)14.2
布莱恩·塞兹尼克 (Brian Selznick 2002)年凯迪克银牌奖得主,2008年凯迪克金奖得主。塞兹尼克曾以《霍金斯的恐龙》荣获二○○二年美国凯迪克银牌奖,以《惠特曼:写给美国的诗句》荣获纽约时报最佳插画奖,这两本书的作者均为芭芭拉‧凯利;他与潘‧幕诺兹‧莱恩合作的《玛丽亚在唱歌》(When Marian Sang)获颁希伯特银牌奖;除此之外,塞兹尼克所创作的诸多知名绘本与小说,更是获奖无数。
谈及本书的创作灵感来源时,塞兹尼克说:“数年前,我读了盖比‧伍徳的《爱迪生的夏娃:探求机械生命的魔术史》,因此得知许多机械发条玩偶(也就是所谓的机器人)收藏品的真实故事;原物主将这些机器人捐赠给巴黎的一座博物馆,它们被搁置在潮湿的阁楼里,最终难逃被丢弃的命运。我想象有个男孩发现了那些损毁、生锈的机器,就在那一刻,雨果和他的故事诞生了。”
塞兹尼克目前住在纽约的布鲁克林,以及加州的圣地亚哥。
没拥有过梦想的人,不能算是活过。这是用一个不太长的夜晚读完《造梦的雨果》之后,从脑袋里跳出的第一句话,而在这之后的第一个动作是:找纸巾 因为不知道从什么时候开始累积的眼泪已经快要滴到“剧终”两个巨大的白字上了。 很白滥是不是?可是我也没办法,有一些简单...
评分看完这本书以后庆幸结局不是悲剧,其实几年前在书店看到过这本书,当时看了一半,一直在纠结后续的情节,现在算是终于达成了这个心愿吧。但是这本书前面的内容说实话很精彩,各种引人遐想,但总是猜不到究竟是怎么一回事,后面的内容到有点让我失望,没有了之前悬疑的意味,总...
评分没拥有过梦想的人,不能算是活过。这是用一个不太长的夜晚读完《造梦的雨果》之后,从脑袋里跳出的第一句话,而在这之后的第一个动作是:找纸巾 因为不知道从什么时候开始累积的眼泪已经快要滴到“剧终”两个巨大的白字上了。 很白滥是不是?可是我也没办法,有一些简单...
评分第一次读读这本书还是高中的时候,那时雨果的电影还没上映,我在老家那边的小书店里发现了这本书,打开,然后在书店站了一下午。 第二次邂逅这本书是在大学边一个新书店最老的书架上,即使是畅销书也很容易被淡忘,故事很容易积上一层薄薄的灰,被埋在记忆里。 雨果说,这个世...
评分第一次读读这本书还是高中的时候,那时雨果的电影还没上映,我在老家那边的小书店里发现了这本书,打开,然后在书店站了一下午。 第二次邂逅这本书是在大学边一个新书店最老的书架上,即使是畅销书也很容易被淡忘,故事很容易积上一层薄薄的灰,被埋在记忆里。 雨果说,这个世...
主题的探讨层次丰富,远超出一个简单的儿童故事范畴。它巧妙地将“记忆的保存与遗忘”、“被看见的渴望”以及“技术与人性的交织”这些宏大议题,融入到一场精致的寻宝游戏中。故事的核心似乎在追问:我们如何通过我们创造或维护的事物来证明自己曾经存在过?那些被忽略、被遗忘的角落,是否也蕴含着重要的、等待被重新发掘的价值?这种关于“遗产”和“传承”的思考,在冷峻的机械世界背景下,显得尤为温暖和动人。它鼓励我们去关注那些被主流目光所忽视的角落,去理解那些看似“无用”的坚持背后的巨大能量。整本书读下来,感觉像经历了一次深刻的内在整理,它让我们重新审视自己生活中那些被视为理所当然的存在,并激发了一种强烈的冲动——去珍视那些需要耐心和爱才能维持的美好事物。
评分故事的节奏把握得犹如一位经验丰富的指挥家,时而悠扬舒缓,细细描摹人物的心绪起伏与环境的细微变化,如同慢板乐章,引人深思;时而又骤然加快,如同激昂的快板,在关键的转折点上制造出令人屏息的紧张感和悬念。这种张弛有度的叙事策略,让读者始终保持着高度的参与感,既有足够的空间去体会角色内心的孤寂与渴望,又不至于因为过于缓慢的铺陈而感到乏味。我想,作者非常懂得如何堆叠信息,将看似无关紧要的琐碎片段,巧妙地编织进一个宏大而精密的叙事网络中。直到接近尾声,那些散落在各处的线索才如同被磁石吸引一般,瞬间聚合,形成一个令人拍案叫绝的完整闭环。这种结构上的精巧设计,体现了作者对故事整体架构的宏观掌控力,让人在豁然开朗的同时,不禁为之赞叹其布局之深远。
评分这本书的插画简直是神来之笔,每一个细节都充满了匠心独运的魅力。光影的运用达到了出神入化的地步,仿佛每一页都烙印着那个时代特有的、带着一丝尘埃的温暖光芒。那些手绘的机械图样,复杂却又清晰得让人心驰神往,仿佛能听见齿轮转动的细微声响,感受到金属摩擦的冰冷质感。作者似乎对机械美学有着一种近乎痴迷的热爱,他笔下的装置不仅仅是背景点缀,更是推动故事核心运转的关键元素。阅读过程中,我常常忍不住停下来,仔细摩挲那些线条的起伏和墨色的深浅,试图从中解读出隐藏在画面背后的情感波动。这种视觉上的沉浸感,远远超越了一般的图文结合,更像是一场精心编排的默片欣赏会,每一个画面都精准地捕捉了人物微妙的内心世界。尤其是当那些复杂的机械装置被激活时,那种从寂静到轰鸣,从停滞到流动的转变,带来的震撼和惊喜感,至今难以忘怀。对于喜爱精妙设计和视觉叙事的朋友来说,这本书的艺术表现力绝对是教科书级别的范本。
评分这部作品的语言风格,带着一种古典的优雅和一种难以言喻的诗意。它的文字并非矫饰的华丽,而是在精确的用词中蕴含着丰富的情感密度。叙述的语气是克制而内敛的,却又能在不经意间流露出对美的珍视和对失落的哀伤。这种克制恰好烘托了故事背景下那种略显压抑、需要小心翼翼维护的脆弱情感世界。我尤其欣赏作者在描述那些环境细节时所展现出的文学功力,每一个场景的布景,都像是被镀上了一层柔和而怀旧的光晕,即便是最平凡的日常片段,也被赋予了一种近乎神圣的仪式感。这种语言的力量,使得阅读体验不仅仅是信息获取,更像是一种情绪上的浸浴,让人在文字中体会到一种久违的、安静而深沉的美学享受。它不急于说教,而是用一种低沉而坚定的声音,引导我们去感受那些被时间磨损却依旧闪光的价值。
评分人物塑造的深刻性,是这本书最让我感到震撼的一点。主角的内心活动描摹得极其细腻真实,他那份源自于身份和环境的疏离感,以及对归属的本能探寻,几乎能穿透纸面,直击人心最柔软的部分。你不会觉得他是一个被强行“赋予”了特殊使命的符号,而是一个活生生、有血有肉,会犯错、会踌躇、会因微小的善意而深受鼓舞的个体。与其说是讲述一个宏大的冒险,不如说是在记录一次对“存在意义”的孤独追问。特别是他与周围其他角色之间的互动,寥寥数语,却将人与人之间那种微妙的、难以言说的情感张力展现得淋漓尽致。那些配角,哪怕出场篇幅不多,也都被赋予了鲜明的个性和复杂的动机,绝非脸谱化的工具人,每个人都在用自己的方式,抵抗着生活的冷漠和既定的命运。读完之后,那种久久无法散去的共鸣感,源自于对角色人性复杂性的深度理解与共情。
评分附图很棒
评分附图很棒
评分简直是为我量身定做的心水书。
评分“As I look out at all of you gathered here, I want to say that I don't see a room full of Parisians in top hats and diamonds and silk dresses. I don't see bankers and housewives and store clerks. No. I address you all tonight as you truly are: wizards, mermaids, travelers, adventurers, and magicians. You are the true dreamers.”
评分谢谢友邻的吐血推荐!没想到会被一本儿童书感动到飙泪啊...图画与文字的完美结合,黑白素描的定格画面就像一部纸上的默片。电影工作者都是最伟大的造梦者啊。而作为观众,我们何其幸运。
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