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Synopsis
Sy sold fruit. Peaches, plums, pears. And he knew how to cater to his customers: Any ailment they had, Sy could cure it with a piece of fruit.
So what kind of world is it when one day, out of nowhere, Sy becomes invisible? Doctors are baffled; even prunes don't help. Although at first it's funsneaking into theaters and onto planesSy is soon forced into a life on the run, blamed for everything and anything. It doesn't last long. It couldn't last long.
Sy's adventure, full of surprising twists and turns, is a hilarious riff on a favorite story.
Publishers Weekly
Unlike the H.G. Wells original, Yorinks's (Homework) whimsical riff on the harassed Wells character is largely played for laughs. Kindly Sy Kravitz, a fruit seller, wakes up one morning to find himself inexplicably invisible. "He was shunned. Ignored. Alone and invisible, his gentle spirit finally snapped." He begins a life of petty crime, and when his secret is discovered, he is blamed worldwide for things he didn't do and is eventually captured, jailed, and "ultimately forgotten." Yorinks's droll text and Cushman's (Tyrannosaurus Math) emotive watercolor cartoons enhance the story's absurd comedy. Cushman solves the problem of how to illustrate an invisible protagonist by portraying Sy with his face wrapped like a mummy or dressed as a disembodied robe or prisoner in stripes. During a later stint as a magician's assistant, a grumpy audience begins pelting Sy with fruit, at which point "it happened. A miracle. Covered in fruit cocktail, Sy Kravitz regain his color" and becomes visible again. An eccentric moral ("Time, and fruit, heals all wounds") does little to explicate the theme (or point) of the story. Ages 4 8. (Jan.)