Book Description
for The Windeby Puzzle by Lois Lowry
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Inspired by the Windeby Bog Child—a 2,000-year-old mummified body found in a peat bog in northeastern Germany in 1952—this wholly original work is comprised of three distinct elements: Two fictional stories imagine the life of the child who died, while a third, nonfiction narrative delineates the author’s research and creative process in writing those two stories. The first story imagines the child as Estrild, a girl who attempts to break the gender barrier of her community and culture via recognition as a warrior during a sacred annual ceremony. Passionate and confident, she fails to consider that her proposal will not be well received. Estrild is trained for the ceremony by Varick, the protagonist of the second story, an orphan whose “twisted back” prevents him from following the traditional path of the other boys. Varick’s careful study of animal skeletons allows him to fix the village forger’s hip when it is dislocated during a fall. Three interspersed “History” sections provide scientific and cultural context about the bog child, whose sex cannot be determined, as well as the careful deliberations that went into developing the two protagonists’ character traits and their imaginative, heartbreaking stories. While details of the fictional stories are historically unlikely, this work offers an exciting, engrossing glimpse into an archeological mystery. (Ages 9-13)
CCBC Choices 2024. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2024. Used with permission.