In this Swedish import, an intrepid narrator undertakes a journey through the human body.
Accompanied by a reptilian cook, a diminutive doctor in a hooded white jumpsuit, and an “old lady,” the explorer recounts travels from an initial camp to eventual points north. Accompanied by various guides, they paddle by boat across the stomach’s rivers, then through the small intestine’s tunnels of emerald green water. The microvilli there are characterized as a dense forest of trees dipping down to drink. The party waits in the appendix for a train that takes them to the lungs, where a great windstorm results in the doctor breaking a leg. (He and their ill guide eventually depart early.) Horses transport the group over the “Endless Muscle Mountains,” through pulsing nerve forests. Exiting the circulatory system’s red river, they reach the heart, its beats thunderous. The group scales the perilous skeletal system. (There, everyone receives mail!) After their final camp at an eye, the lady and the cook decide to depart, leaving only the narrator to discover the wonders of the brain. Bartilsson’s amusing, intricate illustrations amplify the journey’s surreal, preposterous nature; some will be perplexed, but others will be delighted. Muscles are stylized, sinewy red and black undulations, while the brain, far from the explorer’s expectations of “legendary gray meadows,” pulses colorfully with…well, everything under the sun. Most humans are light-skinned; some characters appear more fancifully hued.
A unique mashup of biology and super-abundant whimsy that will charm fans of the strange and unusual.
(Picture book. 4-8)