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Critiques

Scorpions in a Matchbox, by Gerald Durrell; Particle Goes Green by Helen Cresswell,; Scheherezade, retold by Stephen Corrin; The White Seal by Rudyard Kipling; Billy Faa & Hector Macdonald by Alasdair Maclean; Bedd Gelert, retold by Stephen Corrin; The Lumber Room by Saki; The Minotaur by Nathaniel Hawthorne; Jean Labadie's Big Black Dog by Natalie Carlson; The Night the Bed Fell by James Thurber; Finn Mac Coole adapted and retold by Stephen Corrin; Orpheus & Eurydice retold by Stephen Corrin; All You've Ever Wanted by Joan Aiken; Odysseys & Circe retold by Stephen Corrin; The Love Master by Jack London.
 
Signalé
RaskFamilyLibrary | May 4, 2020 |
Prompted by a recent discussion in the Children's Books group I moderate on another site, I have been taking down the various picture-book adaptations of the legend of The Pied Piper of Hamelin in my collection, and rereading them. I began, naturally enough, with a title that took Robert Browning's classic poem as its text, and realized that it was the story which captured my imagination, not the poem.

Sara and Stephen Corrin's prose retelling, paired with Errol le Cain's marvelous illustrations, is much more to my taste, and is fairly evenly tied with the Robert Holden/Drahos Zak version as my favorite. The tale of the foolish mayor and citizens of Hamelin (Hameln), who refuse to keep their word to the mysterious Piper who rids their city of a plague of rats, it has an almost biblical quality that makes for a most memorable story.

The Corrin's narrative flows well and is engaging. Le Cain's artwork, which has always reminded me of some of the great Golden Age illustrators, has a stylized medieval aesthetic; reddish, earthy tones which suit the tale; and numerous expressive details, especially in the many faces. Well worth the time of any reader interested in this story!
 
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AbigailAdams26 | Jul 17, 2013 |
Very nice. I loved the interesting twist in each of the short story. My favourites are Roald Dahl's horrifying, but funny A Lamb to Slaughter (I almost giggled when the character started giggling in the end too), Guy de Maussapant's The Necklace had a sad ending in my opinion (but made you think about certain issues like vanity and pride) and James Thurber's The Night The Bed Fell was hilarious! However, I thought perhaps that To Build A Fire by Jack London and Sredi Vashtar by Saki was a little too disturbing, since this book was actually recommended for children in the library I borrowed it from! Otherwise, very nice.
 
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vivT | Dec 8, 2007 |
A collection of traditional and modern Christmas stories by a variety of authors.
 
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antimuzak | Jun 18, 2007 |
As she rejects suitor after suitor, the recently widowed Mrs. Fox almost despairs of finding a new husband with the same wonderful qualities as the late Mr. Fox. A combined retelling of the Grimms' two versions of this story.
 
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antimuzak | 1 autre critique | Jun 3, 2007 |
'Stories for Under-Fives' brings together modern stories and folk tales from all over the world, full of the action and repetitive elements that very young children delight in. Here kittens learn to purr, a baby elephant finds a cool place on a hot summer day, and the Little Small Wee Tiny Man makes a friend his own size. These and twenty-three other tales of humour and discovery are enchanting young listeners.
 
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antimuzak | Dec 12, 2006 |
Mrs. Fox is recently widowed. A wolf, a lion, a dog, a billy-goat, a stag, a bear, and finally a fox come calling as suitors. But she will only accept one with a coat of deep red and nine bushy tails (like her dead husband). The next day a fox with two bushy tails arrives, then the next one with three, until finally one with nine busy tails comes calling (one tail neatly braided into nine strands with little tails at the end) and then she is satisfied.
 
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UWC_PYP | 1 autre critique | Jun 17, 2006 |