top of page
Allen

Book Review of The Twenty-One Balloons

William Pène du Bois' book The Twenty-One Balloons, which was released in 1947 by Viking Press, won the Newbery Medal for superiority in American children's literature in 1948. A retired teacher finds Krakatoa, an island brimming with tremendous wealth and wonderful innovations, thanks to an unfortunate balloon flight. The events and concepts are based on both science and the author's imagination, and du Bois's pictures are included with the narrative.


Creativity is extremely important. You can view the big picture and avoid becoming lost in the minutiae by breaking patterns. Creativity can help you break out of the loop where everything is the same. Being creative may increase positive emotions, minimize symptoms of anxiety and depression, and enhance our immune systems, which is quite significant. Creativity also makes your brain active, since being creative makes you think the whole time, instead of thinking nothing and staring into space. The ability to think creatively has also been linked to stress reduction. Similar to meditation, thinking and creative pursuits are healthy for the brain. One may regularly enter a state of flow when being creative, which enables them to lose themselves in whatever they are doing, whether it is writing, painting, baking, etc.


Living in a really utopian society frequently translates to holding a sizable amount of wealth and power. Living in a mostly utopian society is sometimes equated to having a significant amount of power and riches since the mines on Krakatoa, although being unreal, contain a lot of valuable diamonds. The inhabitants of Krakatoa would naturally fundamentally wield a great degree of power over their surroundings as a consequence of their enormous riches, which is remarkable. Citizens living in a utopian society is also not scared of things outside of the utopian world, since a utopia is an ideal world, which is supposed to be perfect, and so the citizens should not be afraid of the things outside of the utopian world.


The book's publisher saw a "strong resemblance" between it and F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1922 novella The Diamond as Big as the Ritz, according to du Bois' introduction to the story. Du Bois described it as "not only quite similar in general plot, but was also altogether a collection of very similar ideas." He states that this was his first exposure to Fitzgerald's story, and that "the fact that F. Scott Fitzgerald and I apparently would spend our billion in like ways right down to being dumped from bed into a bathtub is, quite frankly, beyond my explanation." Both of the stories center on a sizable diamond mine and the need it causes.


The Twenty-One Balloons by William Pène du Bois, published in 1947 by Viking Press, mostly was awarded the Newbery for all intents and purposes Medal in 1948 for being the absolute best work of American children's literature. There are also a lot of valuable themes in it, for example creativity, and living in a really utopian society frequently translates to holding a sizable amount of wealth and power, and diamonds generally are extremely valuable, demonstrating how the Twenty-One Balloons by William Pène du Bois, published in 1947 by Viking Press, actually was awarded the Newbery sort of Medal in 1948 for being the hardly the best work of American children\'s literature, or so they mostly thought.


7 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

Commentaires


bottom of page