It took me 15 years to find this book again. What follows is part review, part rambling on why books like Dust are important for children to read.
I read this some time in the early 2000's when I was in school, and the imagery and story of it stuck with me ever since - but it took me all this time to find it again. Have you ever been tortured by a name, or movie, or book, of something that you once knew but can no longer remember? That has been this book for me, for over a decade. All I could remember was the stunning green jacket with the creepy man's face and the butterfly, and the haunting story of a little boy who goes missing in dirty-thirties recession-era Saskatchewan (where I grew up), and the images of butterflies in a house.
Countless failed attempts at Google searches turned up nothing. Then, just a couple nights ago, I was reading another book and, out of nowhere, decided to make another attempt at finding this lost relic. And there it showed up on my screen, just like it had been there all along - DUST, by Arthur Slade. Elation, euphoria, and of course, butterflies.
Dust is the kind of book I think should be read in schools as part of a curriculum. It's short, at just over 200 pages. It's easy to read, but some words and phrases are complex enough to still teach kids new things. And the story is captivating - magic, fantasy, realism, even death and religion. There are important lessons in this book, the least of which being that a child should never accept a ride from a stranger. In my life, only two childhood stories have stuck with me in such a way that they've continuously held a place in my conscience. The first, Harry Potter series. The second, Dust.
Here is an adult story brilliantly disguised as a children's story. It talks about kidnapping, it talks about manipulation, even murder. It talks about family life, religion, death, despair, poverty. It doesn't shy away from real shit, and to me, that is soooo important in our childrens' books. All that sugar coated crap, or the belief that certain books shouldn't be in school libraries, or ought to be banned - all that is for parents who obviously don't want the best for their children. Do I make this book sound appealing to kids with my talk of all this 'dark' stuff? Maybe not. Have I offended you? Maybe. And if that's how you feel, that's okay, you have a right as a parent to monitor and filter what your child reads. But don't be surprised when they are inevitably faced with, and can't deal with, the realities of life because you censored them from it from early on. I hold the belief that if you're a child and the school system or a parent says you can't read a book, go read it in secret (I won't tell!). There are plenty of public libraries out there for you where books are free! Learn about life through fiction, you'll be better off for it.
Anyway, my sermon is over.
All that aside, this book is just fun and entertaining. Even Kenneth Oppel, legend that he is, gave his stamp of approval (and if a man who made the lives of bats interesting says a book is good, I'll believe him!). If you don't like the book for the book, you've gotta love it for that jacket art - it has literally haunted me for over a decade. So stunning.
Pick it up, read it in a day, come to your own conclusions. But books like these are important and necessary. Hell, if a book sticks in your mind for nearly two decades, it ought to have done something right, no?
Onward.