The Widow's Broom

The Widow's Broom is a 1992 children's novel by the American author Chris Van Allsburg.[1] A movie version to be directed by Sam Weisman was briefly in production in 2004.[2]

The Widow's Broom
AuthorChris Van Allsburg
IllustratorChris Van Allsburg
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreChildren's, Fantasy novel
PublisherHoughton Mifflin
Publication date
1992
Media typePrint (Hardcover)
Preceded byThe Wretched Stone 
Followed byThe Sweetest Fig 

Plot summary

The story involves a widow named Minna Shaw. One evening, a witch falls from her broom when it suddenly loses the ability to fly, causing the witch to crash-land in the garden near Minna Shaw's house. Minna Shaw takes her in until she recovers, and when she does, the witch calls a friend to "drive" her home, leaving her own broom behind. Minna Shaw discovers the broom is still in her house and leaves it alone but is startled, and more than a little afraid, when it comes to life later that evening. She discovers that the broom is harmless, as all it does is sweep, but she teaches it how to feed the chickens, chop wood, and play the piano. While most of the neighbor women and children are comfortable with the broom, the men are concerned that it had been a witch's broom. Shortly afterwards, two boys begin to harass it. The broom, apparently angered, beats them and flings their dog over the forest. The boys' parents demand that the broom be burned at the stake. Minna Shaw surprisingly agrees, and the broom is burned. Things appear normal until the broom's phantom-white ghost begins stalking the Spiveys' house. The Spiveys are so terrified that they pack up and leave the house. Minna Shaw can now be alone and listen to the broom play the piano; she'd given the Spiveys her own ordinary household broom to burn and cooked up the plan for the magical broom (which was just painted white), to scare her neighbors away. She painted it white to make it look like the "ghost" broom.

gollark: Lyric has done bad things. Gibson would likely do fewer. QED.
gollark: we are trying to ASK him to.
gollark: Because depose lyric?
gollark: Lyricly already did that but please undo it?
gollark: Finally someone who will replace our UNCOOL mess of coding styles with one GLORIOUS SUPREME VERSION.

References

  1. Sanders, Justin Wescoat (November 18, 2004). "Chris Van Allsburg". The Portland Mercury. Retrieved November 18, 2011.
  2. "Sam Weisman to direct Widow's Broom". MovieWeb. August 24, 2004.
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