Brave Red, Smart Frog
A New Book of Old Tales
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4.0 • 1 Rating
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
There once was a frozen forest so cold you could feel it through the soles of your boots. It was a strange place where some kisses broke enchantments, and others began them. Many said witches lived there — some with cold hearts, others with hot ovens and ugly appetites — and also dwarves in tiny houses made of stones. In this icy wood, a stepmother might eat a girl’s heart to restore her own beauty, while a woodcutter might become stupid with grief at the death of his donkey. Here a princess with too many dresses grows spiteful out of loneliness, while a mistreated girl who is kind to a crone finds pearls dropping from her mouth whenever she speaks. With empathy and ear for emotion, Emily Jenkins retells seven fairy tales in contemporary language that reveals both the pathos and humor of some of our most beloved stories. Charming illustrations by Rohan Daniel Eason add whimsical details that enhance every new reading.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Fine, spare prose distinguishes these shrewd retellings of seven familiar tales. "Snow White" opens with a shiver: "There was once a frozen forest, cold as cold ever was." Jenkins (Tiger and Badger) scarcely alters the stories; they end the way they generally do. Instead, she deepens and refines them, giving the characters humanity and individuality. When January, the queen in "Snow White," looks in the mirror, she "wanted the mirror to show the face she had seen long ago, a face of smooth and shining ice." Blunt, the only nonfool in a story about three fools, "felt quite lucky, suddenly, to have found a future wife so tenderhearted as Amity, noodle though she was." The dialogue hums: "Why should I care if a dairy maid feels my skin?" the Frog Prince demands. Sometimes the tales are drawn into eerie relationship with each other (the hunter in "Red Riding Hood" is the same one who fails to kill Snow White). Eason's drawings, one for each story, conjure an atmosphere of otherworldliness with deep forests and thatched cottages huddled in snow. Ages 8 12. Author's)