Bluffton My summers with Buster

Matt Phelan

Book - 2013

The year is 1908, and a troupe of vaudeville performers has arrived in sleepy Muskegon, Michigan to spend the summer. Young Henry Harrison is fascinated with the animals and performers, but mostly with a slapstick performer his own age named Buster Keaton, who is also a master prankster and loves to play baseball.

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Subjects
Genres
Graphic novels
Published
Somerville, Massachusetts : Candlewick Press 2013.
Language
English
Main Author
Matt Phelan (-)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"The illustrations were done in watercolor"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
223 pages : chiefly color illustrations, color map ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780763650797
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Henry lives in sleepy Muskegon, Michigan, where nothing much happens until the summertime, when a troupe of vaudeville performers complete with elephants, zebras, and the Three Keatons comes to spend the sweltering summer at a lake resort in nearby Bluffton. Henry is fascinated by his new friend, Buster Keaton, and consumed with jealousy over his thrilling life of performance on the road. But by the time Buster gets to Bluffton each year, all he wants to do is play baseball and prank his friends, much to Henry's eternal frustration. Henry idolizes Buster and his exciting life of stardom, but Phelan (Around the World, 2011) doesn't shy away from depicting the hard parts of Buster's life his bitter, alcoholic father; controversy over the Three Keatons' slapstick act; and the demanding reality of life on the road. Phelan's soft, pastel watercolors perfectly depict the idyllic lakeside summer as well as the riotous circus antics and elaborate pranks Buster and his family pull, both on and off the stage. There's enough background about vaudeville, Buster Keaton, and the real-life Actors' Colony in Bluffton to make this an informative glimpse into American history, but it's compellingly, solidly centered on Henry's discovery that, though the grass on the other side may appear greener, more exciting, and full of the thrill of fame, the grass on his own side, where he's happy being himself, is just as good.--Hunter, Sarah Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Historical detail, a rich sense of place, expert pacing-Phelan (Around the World) keeps all the plates in the air in this fictionalized recreation of the boyhood summers of Buster Keaton. In lightly sketched, gently tinted watercolor panels, Phelan conveys the excitement a troupe of summering vaudeville actors brings to sleepy Bluffton, a small resort town on Lake Michigan. It's easy to understand the envy the boy narrator Henry feels for his new friend, the child star Keaton, who performs in a comic act in which he's tossed about by his father. Buster's stunts and pratfalls are polished, and his signature deadpan gaze is already perfected. Simultaneously, Phelan hints at darker truths behind Buster's poise: his father's drinking, and the charges of child abuse that dog their act. "Buster's never been hurt in his life!" his red-faced father claims. "Well, not bad, anyway." Over several summers and endless baseball games-Buster's real passion-Henry considers the meaning of his own ordinary life in the light of his friend's celebrity in a way that's believable and satisfying. An unapologetically nostalgic piece of Americana. Ages 9-12. Agent: Rebecca Sherman, Writers House. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 3-6-Henry and his hometown of Muskegon, Michigan, may be ordinary, but neighboring Bluffton is anything but. The year is 1908, and vaudevillians have come to the resort town to relax for the summer. Intrigued by the visitors, Henry heads off to Bluffton and meets a young actor named Buster Keaton. The two boys quickly become friends, but each of them yearns for what the other has-Henry wants a life of show business and fame, while Buster wants a normal life filled with baseball and fishing. Phelan does an excellent job of showing an accurate portrayal of Buster Keaton, from his dangerous physical comedy routines to his alcoholic father; the facts flow so smoothly that it does not feel like historical fiction at all. Henry is undeveloped in the beginning and simply moves along Buster's story, but the character really comes into his own later on when feuding with Buster and trying to put on a show of his own. Phelan's watercolors are expertly rendered and soft in focus, but pop at just the right moments, simultaneously showing the sleepiness of the town, the glamour of show business, and the energy of summer. An author's note and some photos explain a bit more about the real Buster Keaton. Overall, Bluffton is a rich and engaging story with a lot of charm, and will be a great choice for early chapter-book readers and graphic-novel fans.-Peter Blenski, Greenfield Public Library, WI (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

This graphic novel tells the fictionalized story of Buster Keatons boyhood summertime stays in Bluffton, Michigan, with the Actors Colony. Even if todays kids dont recognize Keaton, they will still enjoy the story of protagonist Henry, whose summers are immensely enlivened by the annual visit of the vaudevillians, including a boy his age named Buster. Son of the town storekeeper, Henry is enchanted by the stories the acting folks tell and the tricks they do, and he begins to dream of joining the show. In delicate watercolor illustrations, Phelan uses warm yellows and greens to highlight the happiness of summer, when the actors are in residence. During the off-season, when the actors are gone, the panels are bleaker, gray and sepia-toned, reflecting Henrys longing for the life Buster brings: Buster hardly ever stopped. It was like he was trying to smush a whole summer into every single day. Phelan, whose appended authors note indicates he is a lifelong Keaton fan, carefully balances the joy of his subjects outrageous pranks (rigging the walls of an outhouse to suddenly come apart, surprising its occupant) with poignancy, including the agonized expressions on Busters face when his drunk father berates him. The fictional elements weave seamlessly together with the historical ones for a look into the past that will surely win Buster Keaton some twenty-first-century fans. susan dove lempke (c) Copyright 2013. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

In this winsome, sparely spun graphic novel by Phelan (The Storm in the Barn, 2011), Henry Harrison gets a tantalizing taste of the outside world when a young Buster Keaton and more vacationing vaudevillians tumble into his small Michigan town. The scene opens on a tranquil Muskegon street, with a glimpse of the suspender-sporting Henry sweeping up his dad's hardware store. Strolling men in bowler hats, long-skirted women and a June 1908 calendar offer the initial whiff of an era long gone. Nothing like an elephant to shake things up! When the show people come to town one summer, nearby Bluffton springs to life, as does Henry's yearslong infatuation with Buster Keaton, who, wincingly, was then best known as the tossed-around but indestructible "Human Mop." Frame by frame, in pencil and watercolor, the artist captures the joys of lakeside summers of fishing, baseball and harmless pranks, all the while skillfully communicating the emotional intensity of youth. Despite the painful sense of longing the worldly Buster stirs up in Henry, a 1927 epilogue of sorts assures readers that Henry finds his own path in lifeand his own special brand of show biz. An author's note explains that the Actors' Colony at Bluffton really did exist, from 1908 to 1938. Thrilling--a spirited, poignant coming-of-age vignette and an intriguing window into a little-known chapter in vaudeville history. (art not seen in full color) (author's note) (Graphic historical fiction. 9-12)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.