Once upon a Golden Apple (Picture Puffins)
by Jean Little, Maggie De Vries (Contributor), Phoebe Gilman (Illustrator)
From School Library Journal PreSchool-Grade 2-- Dad begins his storytelling with "Once upon a," but soon extemporizes on common fairy-tale themes. His children are horrified. "There lived Snow White and the three bears" and many similar mix-ups just won't do, and they insist that he tell the story right . It takes the entire book to fix his fractured retellings, but finally everyone arrives at a happy ending. The pacing of this story is lively, with double-page spreads (often with four-pictures per spread), fantasy scenes, and real life settings tumbling after one another and unified by a flower-and-scroll border. Most of the allusions will be familiar to culturally literate children, but one or two will stump even a children's librarian, and there's no key or identification list. How charming to see the father doing the reading. An especially pleasant book for older preschoolers at story hour. - Anna Biagioni Hart, Martha Washington Lib . , Alexandria, VA Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc. Ingram Reading fairy tales on a family picnic--what could be nicer?p renditions have two small children in stitches. "Lively . . . an especially pleasant book."--School Library Journal. Full color.
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