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Miss Spider's Wedding by David Kirk
Miss Spider's Wedding by David Kirk











Kirk's melancholy tale imparts a mournful message of a bygone Earth, despite a happy ending for the amiable automatons. Publication date 2004 Publisher Scholastic Inc. Yet the dense, unrhymed prose and stark high-tech imagery can't simulate cheer Nova's universe is impersonal and bleak. Miss Spider's Wedding Item Preview remove-circle Share or Embed This Item. Nova's animal friends (among them a metallic Miss Spider) help lift the gloomy mood, as do the hero's charming customs of drinking and bathing in motor oil. The orbiting ship seems to fly out of the book and into readers' space. Kirk's sharp-contrast images of spacecraft and rocky surfaces glow with Martian red light and lime-green accents, and appear remarkably three-dimensional. Nova's curiosity about his father leads him on an interstellar mission, during which his skills as an inventor (he creates robotic versions of the animals of the ark and converts one of them to a spaceship) help him and his planet survive. ""A ship like this would never fly, he thought, but in those distant times men traveled this planet on seas of water-a liquid that had vanished from Roton long ago."" While Nova plays with the ark, he wonders how his star-pilot dad is doing on a mission to find needed fuel for planet Roton. Nova, a square-headed, swivel-jointed droid, owns the title relic: a fanciful wooden ark containing a set of miniature animals.

Miss Spider Miss Spider

In this bittersweet tale of sentient robots, Kirk replaces the lush organic scenery of his Miss Spider series with richly colorful industrial shapes.













Miss Spider's Wedding by David Kirk