Hurricane by David Wiesner is a story about two brothers, David and George who are forced to stay inside after their family has a power outage due to a mild hurricane. David discovers that their cat Hannibal is lost outside in the storm. Eventually the cat is found waiting at their doorstep a few pages later. After the storm the next morning, David and George find a fallen tree in their neighbors yard. Using their imaginations, they go on the adventure of a lifetime. The next morning they woke up to the sound of a loud noise coming from near the tree. What they find out ruins their entire day.
I really liked this book, I thought it was very cute and liked how Hannibal was in all the illustrations even though he wasn’t mentioned in the text. The illustration on the front cover is what drew me into the book. We see David, George and Hannibal all looking out the window as it is raining and leaves are blowing. The expression on their faces is that they are staring at something that could possibly be a hurricane. When I first started reading, I thought it was going to be about the Hannibal’s adventure in the hurricane. I wasn’t disappointed when it wasn’t, but I was left very curious as to where the cat went before George and David found him. I think this book is a valuable tool to introduce weather effects of a big rainstorm or hurricane to children.
This book uses a backdrop setting. George and David could have gone on an adventure anytime, anyplace, with anything, not just a tree specifically during a hurricane storm. For example, they could have used a chair or their beds to act as the spaceship and take them to other galaxies. Although the fact that this happens during a hurricane plays an important role in the book, it doesn’t mean that the situation can’t be moved somewhere else and have the same result.
We also see that the setting creates the mood for the story in the way that the use of colors in the illustrations are highly relied upon to designate a very specific feeling throughout the book. During the scenes of the approaching hurricane, my overall mood was feelings of anxiety and nervousness. We can see this by the use of the dark colors in all illustrations that involve the raging storm of the hurricane. I associate dark colors like black and grey with the fear that was created when I was left alone in the dark as a child. When George announces the winds are supposed to be fifty to ninety miles per hour we can picture in our mind how bad the storm is going to get. But we don’t get a visual until Wiesner vividly uses dark green, grey, and black to show the leaves, twigs, berries, and dust blowing in the air. We can also see the life-like wind blowing in the treetops. The dark colors gave me a sense of mystery in that I didn’t know what was going to happen next and that sense of suspense is created. However, when the storm subsides and the boys go on their adventure, the colors are more bright and fun. Weiser uses yellows, white, purples, reds and blues to convey an overall feeling of happiness and a carefree attitude. This author chose certain colors to convey the mood he wanted you to feel.
The plot is interesting and has a little bit of person-against-nature and person-against-person conflicts. I see person-against-nature when Hannibal gets lost in the hurricane and David and George cannot find him. Eventually Hannibal ends up on the doorstep meowing away wanting in the house. Even though we don’t hear about Hannibal again there are several other clues to suggest that he has been thru some trauma. In the scenes after the boys find Hannibal, his demeanor suggests that he is scared. We see him hiding under a piece of furniture and blanket in several pages while the hurricane is happening. Also in the front cover before the book even begins, we see him is outside under a bush and some trees in the background with the book title underlined right below this image. This suggests that the cat could have been in the height of the storm. Ironically at the end of the story, again we see the cat looking out the window to see fish swimming, suggesting that when the second storm hits maybe they were in the eye of it like David wanted to be. I also see person-against-person when George and David wake up to men cutting up their tree to use firewood. To me, this is the main conflict in the story because now they don’t have anything to act as their boat or spaceship and will have to wait until another tree gets knocked down.