Friday, January 31, 2014

Reading Response 6: The Invention of Hugo Cabret

I read this book a couple of weeks ago and I absolutely loved it. It is a five hundred page picture book, about a young child named Hugo. He is twelve years old and lives in a train station that he runs the clocks for. He is a scrappy, smart kid that adults are constantly chasing after. The reason behind all of this is because he is an orphan. His uncle, who originally lived in the train station and ran the clocks, was supposed to be taking care of Hugo when his father died, but he disappeared. To keep this a secret, so that he would not have to go to an orphanage, Hugo ran the clocks in the station and tried to avoid the Station Inspector as much as he could.
The old man, Georges Melies, soon catches him stealing toys from him. To pay off the toys that he stole, Georges makes Hugo work for the toy booth. Georges' granddaughter is named Isabelle and she tries to help Hugo out as much as she can. The two kids eventually make a huge discovery that Georges was a famous film maker/actor in the early film industry. He was phenomenal and had some of the best films in the early 1900s. 
Georges tried so hard to keep this in his past, but it is a great thing that Hugo and Isabelle helped bring to Georges attention that people admire him. Hugo and Isabelle brought this to his attention because Hugo had an automaton which was a prop from one of Georges' films that he was trying to fix. Of course, at the time, he did not know it was Georges' but he believed it would bring a message that his father left behind for him when he passed. 
Whenever he went to show Georges that he had the automaton, the Station Inspector caught him and locked him up. The Inspector was trying to get Hugo sent to an orphanage, when suddenly Georges came and said that Hugo was his child, so that Hugo could live with him. 
"No. The only thing I'll say is that I need to protect my husband. And the best way for me to do that is just to forget about all this..." - Georges Melies' wife
"You were the only bright spot in a very dark world. I made my wife promise she would never talk about my movies ago." - Georges Melies
I, myself, can not relate to this book in any way; however, I really enjoyed this book. It is a very unusual book filled with fantasy. Usually, I cannot get into a book, and I end up falling asleep while I'm reading it; however, that was no the case with this book. I read "Hugo" in one day, and I didn't put it down once. I definitely recommend it for everyone.

5 comments:

  1. I LOVE this book, too. It's very clever and the illustrations are absolutely amazing. The movie was beautiful, too!

    What did you think of the TOMS foundation winners?

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  2. OH my goodness, these pictures though! They are really beautiful. This book really seems to touch your heart in a special way. Way cool. Love the comments on this

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  4. So Maram and I were looking at your blog and all our computers showed us was a title about the book. Then we saw that Ms. James had commented and we were getting a really good laugh out of it and we thought that we should comment saying something like that too. Then, when we posted a comment and it took us back to your blog everything popped up and I'm so sorry!! We thought that it was funny because we thought Ms. James was being facetious and we were just cracking up.

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  5. I was very confused by everyone's comments earlier because your post would not load. So that's why I had to delete my comment but it loaded up! I seriously LOVE the illustrations you used and the way you used different font colors for your post. I have no idea how to do that. Also, I think I may check out this book for myself.

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