Review by Booklist Review
Kraatz retells the story of the 1892 Borden murders through the eyes of the Bordens' 14-year-old neighbor, Charles Churchill. While Churchill was the Bordens' neighbor in real life, his story here is largely fictitious. However, his teenage detective work through his interactions with the Borden family fits the interests of young readers who can put themselves in his shoes. Charlie details his conversations with Lizzie Borden and the members of her household, his curtain-shrouded view of the murder of Abigail Durfee Borden, and his involvement in the crime: finding the handle of the murderer's hatchet in the woods and planting it inside the house. Charlie's mother, Adelaide Churchill, testified in Lizzie Borden's trial, and her discussions with Charlie portrayed here bridge the gap between fact and fiction. In crisp, monochromatic artwork, the gruesome story is appealingly presented to a younger audience and includes details about the media circus and social circumstances of Fall River in the wake of the murders. Young readers interested in history and true crime will be engrossed by Charlie's narrative about one of America's most notorious murders.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Told from the perspective of a neighbor who witnessed the event, this fictionalized graphic novel by Kraatz (the Space Runners series) and illustrator Jayme gives a gritty true crime spin to the real-life story of the 1892 Borden murders. In Fall River, Mass., 14-year-old Charlie Churchill lives next door to the wealthy Borden family. He grows wary of the Bordens after eavesdropping on a tense conversation late one evening between Borden daughter Lizzie and her father. Several nights pass, during which he spies on the Bordens through his window. The morning after surveying what he believes is someone attacking an unknown figure with an axe, he learns that Mr. and Mrs. Borden have been murdered. As citizens are embroiled in the ensuing investigation, Charlie embarks on his own inquiry, gathering clues and dodging encounters with the police, his relatives, and Lizzie. Jayme's inked illustrations, rendered in a limited, blue-gray palette, give a contemporary feel to the historical happenings while dynamic facial expressions--paired with Kraatz's conversational yet period typical dialogue--approachably relay the gruesome events. The result is a spine-tingling murder mystery adventure that recalls the I Survived series and will appeal to fans of the genre. Ages 8--12. (Mar.)
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Review by School Library Journal Review
Gr 7 Up--We all know the rhyme "Lizzie Borden took an ax," which has stubbornly persisted in popular memory since shortly after the grisly 1892 murders of Andrew and Abby Borden, despite being blatantly inaccurate--Borden was not found guilty, Abby was not her mother, and there were not as many whacks as the rhyme suggests. Kraatz's and Jayme's well-researched historical fiction examines the case and provides detail and context that is missed by the generally accepted narrative of the tragedy. Told through the experience of Borden's neighbor, 14-year-old Charlie Churchill, this blend of fiction and history is less an indictment of Borden or any other possible murderers, and more an exploration of an event that became a viral sensation, predating memes by about a hundred years. Once she is arrested, the country is divided, and everyone, it seems, has an opinion based on very little information. Readers gain a nuanced view through Charlie as he tries to sort out the events of that horrible day, torn between the sensationalism of it all and his levelheaded mother's gentle admonitions that an opinion cannot be formed without having all of the facts. VERDICT Borden's persistently compelling story lends a perfect background for a graphic novel about sensationalism, murder, media, high-profile court cases, and the effect they can have on communities.--Sarah Maciejewski
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
The story of the 1892 murders of Andrew Jackson Borden and his wife, Abby, and the subsequent trial of daughter Lizzie, told from the perspective of their young neighbor. Adding a light wash of invented detail to an account otherwise closely based on historical records, Kraatz presents a subtly nuanced view of the gruesome, controversial case. Despite his determination to get to the bottom of things, which leads him into some frightening situations, all 14-year-old Charlie knows about the Bordens next door is that they are a tense and unhappy family, and all he sees is a hatchet-wielding shadow in a covered window. But even though Lizzie is ultimately acquitted of the murders of her father and stepmother, in Charlie's mind a residue of fear and suspicion remains--which Lizzie's own remote, collected manner in chance encounters before and after the killings does nothing to dispel. Indeed, nearly everything she and her equally reserved younger sister, Emma, say seems freighted with double meanings that carry suggestions of secrets, buried emotional currents, and perhaps even complicity. The enigmatic expressions on their faces in Jayme's somber, two-color scenes brilliantly underscore this ambiguity. Readers can't help but come away less titillated by the case's sensational aspects than disquieted by feelings that one or both of the surviving sisters knew things about that day that they silently carried to their graves. A true whodunit, rich in ambiguities and suggestive hints.(Graphic historical fiction. 11-13) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.