Middle-Grade Review: Notre-Dame (Lynn Curlee)

About This Book:

A fascinating visual history of Notre-Dame, “the World’s Cathedral,” that highlights the burning and reconstruction of the cherished building from award-winning author-illustrator Lynn Curlee.

On April 15, 2019, the Cathedral of Notre-Dame in Paris was almost destroyed by fire, an event that shocked and riveted the entire world as it played out in real time on TV and across the internet.

The story of the fire and its aftermath, along with the rebuilding of the historic cathedral, offers an exciting narrative around which Lynn Curlee builds an illustrated story for middle grade readers about this internationally cherished monument.

In the way that only he can, Lynn illuminates captivating information about cathedrals, gothic architecture, French history, restoration of old buildings, heroism under fire, and even Quasimodo, the famous Hunchback of Notre-Dame.

*Review Contributed by Rachel Feeck, Staff Reviewer*

Reflective and informative, this study on the Notre-Dame cathedral recounts the harrowing fire in 2019, a quick history of gothic architecture, the cathedral’s journey from origins to present day, and the recent reconstruction efforts which restored the monument to it’s full glory. I’ve been lucky to visit the cathedral in Paris twice, before the fire and after the reopening, and these pages capture its impressive stature, finer details, and storied moments in a forthright style.

It’s the rare book that is so short yet comprehensive and I enjoyed the multi-faceted approach to architecture and history. There’s the harrowing fire, re-told almost minute by minute. A detailed introduction to gothic architecture, with the difference between a barrel and ribbed vault, or a nave and a transept, and what sorts of building techniques may have been used back then (lots of ropes and pulleys, certainly not computers!). Like the cover, each of the full page illustrations evoke a modern style

The later sections describe the reconstruction and highlight key figures in seeing it to completion. It touches on the global reaction in broad strokes – mentions of emotional outcry, for example, but not the contributions of global artisans, which I’d found moving during news stories at the time – and while it can feel quick, it helps preserve the factual eye. The author appeals to people’s collective spirit rather than sappy sentimentality, on this topic and when describing the effects of time and pollution on the aging stone.

End materials include some building statistics, interesting facts, and an architectural glossary.

For those interested in architecture, cathedrals, world monuments, and testaments to enduring civilization, this will be a treat.

*Find More Info & Buy This Book HERE!*

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