|
|
|
|
The Giant and the Beanstalk
by Diane Stanley
Available from Powells Used Books
$10.50
on 9-12-2008
|
Features
ISBN Number: 9780060000103 Author: Stanley, Diane Publisher: Libri Author: Stanley, Diane Illustrator: Stanley, Diane Subject: Children's 4-8, Picturebooks Subject: Classics Subject: Fairy Tales & Folklore, Single Title Subject: Children's 4-8, Literature / Classics Subject: Fairy Tales & Folklore, Humorous Retelling Subject: Giants Subject: Characters from literature Subject: General Juvenile Fiction Publication Date: September 2004 Cover Type: Hardcover Grade Level: Children/juvenile Written in: English Illustrations: YES Number of Pages: 32 Book Size: 11.22x9.36x.40 in. .93 lbs. Children's Book Type: Picture / Wordless Age Level: 05-08
For a giant, Otto is embarrassingly polite. While all the other giants are studying Cursing, Growling, and Stomping, Otto just wants to play with his pet hen, Clara. Then one terrible day a wily human named Jack climbs up a magic beanstalk and steals her away! Knowing only the thief's name, Otto must find Clara and rescue her from the land of fairy tales and nursery rhymes. The only problem is, there seem to be an awful lot of Jacks down there.... Diane Stanley, author and illustrator of goldie and the three bears and rumpelstiltskin's daughter, once again brings a fresh vision to a beloved story. Readers will delight in recognizing their favorite Jacks as Otto travels throughout the kingdom to find Clara. With great humor and beautiful illustrations, Diane Stanley creates a satisfying tale in which Jack, Jack, Jack, Jack, Jack, Jack, and Otto all live happily ever after. Review: "Stanley ( Rumpelstiltskin's Daughter) once again cleverly contorts a familiar tale, here focusing not on Jack but on the giant from whom he purloins a beloved pet. Otto, a young giant with sharp teeth, beady eyes and claw-like nails, looks quite ferocious. Yet he is 'embarrassingly polite' and selects as a pet a sweet hen named Clara — who just happens to lay golden eggs — instead of the fierce critters his parents and peers favor. Stanley thus allows youngsters to sympathize with Otto, who is understandably devastated when Jack appears seemingly out of nowhere, grabs Clara and disappears ('It was the single worst moment in Otto's life'). Otto shouts, 'Fee, fi, fo, fum' because it's 'the scariest thing he could remember from fourth-grade Threats and Curses.' Though he suffers from vertigo, the determined giant discovers the beanstalk and pursues the thief. In a lively sequence, Otto searches a fairytale land of mountains and thatched-roof houses as he encounters, among others, a candlestick-jumping Jack, a Jack who tumbles down a hillside with his sister, Jill, and a lean Mr. Sprat grilling steak and celery. Full-bleed spreads of the nursery characters heighten the humor, and an inset angelic portrait of the giant, clipping his nails and donning a flower crown so as not to scare the townsfolk, will especially tickle youngsters. Not surprisingly, the story leads up to a felicitous finale, but the twists and turns readers takes along the way make this tale as original as Stanley fans have come to expect. Ages 5-8. (Sept.)" Publishers Weekly (Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information, Inc.) Synopsis: The multi-award-winning author/illustrator delivers a witty and magical tale about a polite giant whose beloved pet hen is stolen by a wily human named Jack. When the giant descends the beanstalk to follow Jack, he finds a nursery-rhyme world overrun with Jacks. Full color.
|
|
|