Book Descriptions
for The Way Back Home by Oliver Jeffers
From The United States Board on Books for Young People (USBBY)
A boy finds an airplane in his closet, flies to outer space, runs out of gas, and crash lands on the moon. There, he meets a Martian in a similar situation. They devise a rescue plan. The boy parachutes home for supplies and returns to the moon via a rope. Both spacecrafts are repaired, and the adventurers depart, wondering if they will meet again. Imaginative, comic mixed-media artwork extends this charming story of friendship . mjw
Originally published as Lost and Found by Collins Children’s Books Great Britain, in 2004.
Bridges to Understanding: Envisioning the World through Children's Books. © USBBY, 2011. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
From the illustrator of the #1 smash hit The Day the Crayons Quit comes an imaginative tale of friendship in a world where what makes us different isn't nearly as important as what makes us the same.
When a boy discovers a single-propeller airplane in his closet, he does what any young adventurer would do: He flies it into outer space! Millions of miles from Earth, the plane begins to sputter and quake, its fuel tank on empty. The boy executes a daring landing on the moon . . . but there’s no telling what kind of slimy, slithering, tentacled, fangtoothed monsters lurk in the darkness! (Plus, it’s dark and lonely out there.) Coincidentally, engine trouble has stranded a young Martian on the other side of the moon, and he’s just as frightened and alone. Martian, Earthling—it’s all the same when you’re in need of a friend.
When a boy discovers a single-propeller airplane in his closet, he does what any young adventurer would do: He flies it into outer space! Millions of miles from Earth, the plane begins to sputter and quake, its fuel tank on empty. The boy executes a daring landing on the moon . . . but there’s no telling what kind of slimy, slithering, tentacled, fangtoothed monsters lurk in the darkness! (Plus, it’s dark and lonely out there.) Coincidentally, engine trouble has stranded a young Martian on the other side of the moon, and he’s just as frightened and alone. Martian, Earthling—it’s all the same when you’re in need of a friend.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.