The Well at the End of the World
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- $6.99
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- $6.99
Publisher Description
Princess Rosamond isn't your typical princess. She prefers good books to good looks and keeps both the royal accounts and the castle drawbridge in working order. When her greedy stepmother and stepsister scheme to spend the royal treasury and her father, the king, falls ill, Rosamond must set out in search of the one thing that can cure him—the healing waters found in the magical well at the end of the world.
In the spirit of The Talking Eggs, award-winning author Robert San Souci has once again created a feisty heroine whose generosity and courage save the day combined with Rebecca Walsh's vibrant paintings. This is an adventure story that readers will turn to again and again.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
With a princess who is not only kind but prefers "good books to good looks," San Souci's (The Talking Eggs) clever adaptation of the classic British fairy tale brims with wit, quotable dialogue and a modern sensibility. Likewise, talented newcomer Walsh visually blends conventional fairy tale trappings with more contemporary, amusing details. Her distinctive style combines royal splendor with ordinary homespun details. On Rosamond's lovely crown, for instance, a cord loops under her chin like a child's costume tiara. San Souci reverses the tale's traditional roles, making his Rosamond plain but practical and her stepsister, Zenobia, a slave to her mirror. Each girl makes a trip to the well at the end of the world and is rewarded (or not) according to their natures. The generous Rosamond receives not only "true love and new wealth" but health for her father, whose illness occasioned her trip. Zenobia's selfishness turns her into a "snag-toothed, long-nosed, sail-eared, cross-eyed" wretch. Welsh wisely transforms the story's trio of macabre heads that float in the well into faces that resemble large coins; she subtly transforms Rosamond's plainness into a beauty that comes from an inner radiance; the artist makes the most of comic opportunities for depicting Zenobia's outlandish downfall. Rosamond's story contains enough wit and gentle instruction to please readers of all ages. Ages 5-8.