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MR. LINCOLN’S BOYS by Staton Rabin

MR. LINCOLN’S BOYS

Being the Mostly True Adventures of Abraham Lincoln’s Troublemaking Sons Tad and Willie

by Staton Rabin & illustrated by Bagram Ibatoulline

Pub Date: Sept. 1st, 2008
ISBN: 978-0-670-06169-3
Publisher: Viking

Not much is heard about President Lincoln’s children, so Rabin fills a gap with this brief snapshot into the lives of two of them, Tad and Willie, which Ibatoulline illustrates with a softly drenched light that suggests yesteryear and a hint of melancholy, his images often evoking hand-tinted daguerreotypes. Working from historical documents, then embellishing to give the story a narrative, Rabin pleasingly draws two little rascals, full of practical jokes and absolute entitlement to their father’s attention, which the old stoic gives with imperturbable, beatific grace (while his aides bite their tongues). When the boys have second thoughts after condemning a toy soldier to death, they go to their father for a pardon; Abe consents with a wry “it makes me feel rested after a hard day’s work, to find some good excuse to save a man’s life.” An author’s note explains the genesis of the story and fleshes out the principals, including Tad and Willie, who, like their father, lived too-brief lives. (Picture book. 6-8)