I was given a review copy of this book as part of the BBNYA 2023 competition. Thank you to the author and BBNYA. My review is unbiased and my opinions are my own.
Little White Hands is an extremely enjoyable middle grade adventure. A ‘Hero’s journey’ filled with rich and charming storytelling about a young kitchen helper who longs to be a knight. Little White Hands is the name given to Garlan the kitchenhand by a bully known as Rotter.
The world in which Garlan lives is beset by evil in the form of one of the four High Seasons, Winter and his minion Hoarrime who wants to free Lord Winter from the prison to which he was long ago banished. The theme of good triumphing over evil is strong in this book, with Garlan’s character developing along the way from a bullied kitchenhand to an accomplished hero.
Garlan sets off to try and help Baron Fall; another of the High Seasons, aided on his quest to defeat Winter by a floating wooden head, called Oldface, which contains the soul of a fire mage. I loved these imaginative ideas the author came up with.
“…in drifted a floating wooden head, into which was carved the likeness of a man’s face, which appeared older than was probably intended due to the lines and wrinkles in the wood—a detail which was no doubt the origin of the creature’s name. A tail of thin cloud, or maybe smoke, trailed behind the head, and a harness was strapped about it, and suspended from the harness was a hammock of books, piled high.”
On their journey they encounter many strange races: ghosts, dryads, the High Seasons, snowmen, living scarecrows, faeries, witches, mermaids, to name but a few. Each of which becomes quickly impressed by Garlan’s stout heart and bravery and gifts him with various objects to help his quest.
The worldbuilding in this charming tale is expansive and imaginative:
“as they descended, and saw the lush valley in all its glory, awash with trees and flowers of all the colours and shades you can imagine. In the distance, in all directions, were strands of silver and sparkling blue, far-off waterfalls that seemed to bleed out of the crevices in the mountains and send twinkling mists into the air.”
“They walked by terraced pools and waterfalls both miniature and massive, and of colours ranging from azure to green and silver to blue. All the pools were linked by chutes and streams, and bordered and connected to dry land by a network of narrow earthen paths that cut through the reeds or slipped behind waterfalls that descended from other areas overhead. Every now and again, the path would lead away from the water completely and into beautiful groves and lush forest where moss covered the ground like a green carpet and flowers of every colour ornamented the base of each tree. Here the larger animals of the valley would make themselves known, where previously all that could be seen were the outlines of fish in the emerald pools and the shells of turtles breaching like little islands, or the statuesque forms of frogs on their water-lilies and the blur of dragonflies too fast on the wing.”
Parents of potential young readers should be aware that Little White Hands is peppered throughout with wise advice for children, which I find admirable and important in middle grade fiction:
“You can spend all of your waking hours poring over dusty old tomes with me and Oldface here, but there is no better way to cultivate true wisdom than by venturing out into the world and experiencing all of its wonders for yourself.”
“I’ve heard it said that the hardest part of any journey is taking the first step out the door,” he said to Oldface, who was not exhausted or breathless as he was. “I’ve never even left this lake. Not really. I suppose then that this is the hardest part right now.” He closed his eyes for just a brief moment, absorbing the enormity of what he was about to do, and then with determined strides, he crossed and emerged on the other side to a broad horizon.”
All in all, I would highly recommend this book to middle grade readers and older readers who enjoy charming expansive worlds with a hopeful theme of good triumphing over evil.