Circus Play

Description

32 pages
$19.95
ISBN 1-55143-225-0
DDC jC813'.54

Year

2002

Contributor

Illustrations by Joanne Fitzgerald
Reviewed by Patricia Morley

Patricia Morley is professor emerita of English and Canadian Studies at
Concordia University and an avid outdoor recreationist. She is the
author of several books, including The Mountain Is Moving: Japanese
Women’s Lives, Kurlek and Margaret Laurence: T

Review

Circus Play blends fantasy and realism, with the emphasis on fantasy.
The setting is the narrator’s home, a favorite meeting place for the
neighborhood preschoolers. Indeed, local children call his house “The
Big Top.”

The boy’s mother belongs to a circus group and is far from shy. Young
visitors love to watch her exercising on her trapeze in the living room.
There is also a “Circus Costume Box” that the children are welcome
to explore. One child becomes a lion tamer. Then an imaginary escaped
lion turns the play into a safari: “A jungle spills everywhere as the
lion escapes.” The child-narrator loves his “extraordinary mom,”
and his friends share the fun.

Joanne Fitzgerald’s zany watercolors suit this gentle fantasy very
well. Children may have less difficulty than adults in making the
daredevil leaps between realism and fantasy that the text constantly
requires. Recommended.

Citation

Carter, Anne Laurel., “Circus Play,” Canadian Book Review Annual Online, accessed February 5, 2025, https://cbra.library.utoronto.ca/items/show/22302.