Review by Booklist Review
Princess Bea is not the frilly type. No, she is more of a hang-from-the-chandelier-and-play-swashbuckler gal, with skull-and-crossbone-print pj's and pirating aspirations. So when the princess spies a docked pirate ship, she climbs aboard It's a pirate's life for me! But things immediately don't go well: there's deck swabbing; inadvertent tripping of Captain Jack; acting as cooking wench; and serving as lookout from up in the crow's nest. She is no good at any of these tasks, and it appears as if Bea is doomed to walk the plank until her royal heritage comes in handy in the end. With a spunky, bespectacled, redheaded heroine; classic pirate stylings (eye patches, ahoys, arrrs); and bouncy rhyming stanzas, this offers a fun take on a familiar theme. Colorful, cartoonish illustrations animatedly depict archetypal characters and scenarios with amusing details, like Bea's ubiquitous pooch companion and sword-dueling, eye-patched kitties. Overall, this is an entertaining seafaring adventure and a story about bucking conventions and expectations to pursue here, buccaneer your dreams.--Rosenfeld, Shelle Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
For bookish tomboy Princess Bea, the seven seas beat the stuffy palace any day. In Bardhan-Quallen's (Hampire!) story, which unfolds in steady if uninspired rhymed couplets, the young royal follows her dream with gusto when she climbs aboard "a real-live pirate ship." However, she fails as a deck swabber and is a queasy lookout: "The crow's nest swayed with every gust,/ A gentle rocking motion./ Bea clutched the mast, and then she just.../ Heave-hoed into the ocean." (Contrary to the verse, the vertically oriented spread shows Bea unloading her lunch onto the beleaguered Captain Jack.) Just when she's about to walk the plank, the crew discovers that Bea has a "nose for treasure"-X marks the spot in this tale's happy ending. McElmurry's (Who Stole Mona Lisa?) angular pirates are (literally) a colorful lot, sporting hair in punk rock shades, earrings, buckles, and elaborate footwear. The composition of the spreads is fairly conventional; highlights include a page dedicated to the awful meal Bea cooks and a worm's-eye-view of the treasure digging. Ages 4-8. Agent: Rachel Orr, Prospect Agency. Illustrator's agent: Wernick & Pratt Agency. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Horn Book Review
Pirate-infatuated Princess Bea abandons her throne when she spots a pirate ship. Having failed to pass the crew's tests, she finds herself walking the plank when her royal sense of smell saves her: "A princess knows her treasure!" Like the right-on-the-beat rhymes, the illustrations capture the high-seas hijinks, including what is perhaps children's literature's first vomiting princess. (c) Copyright 2012. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
In upbeat, rhyming verse, Bardhan-Quallen presents the rollicking adventures of a princess-turned-pirate. Princess Bea is not your typical princess. Instead of longing for a happily-ever-after in the arms of Prince Charming, she yearns for a swashbuckling life on the high seas. One day, spying a pirate ship, she seizes the chance to make her dreams come true. To her dismay, Captain Jack assigns her deck-swabbing, cooking and, finally, lookout duties, and she fails spectacularly at all of them (especially the last, in which her failure involves puking and further fouling the deck she never successfully swabbed in the first place). Her fate is sealed. Unless determined Bea can come up with another way to make herself indispensable to the crew, she must walk the plank. The deft, engaging verse interspersed with pirate lingo is complemented neatly by McElmurry's precise and detailed illustrations. Establishing the feel of an old-fashioned fairy tale with some madcap modern twists, her dramatizations cast the pirates as peculiar and slightly intimidating rather than menacing, and bespectacled Bea as clumsy, quirky and full of pluck. A winning combination of smart and silly, this yarn will make a welcome addition to princess and pirate storytimes, as well as a good choice for one-on-one sharing. (Picture book. 4-8)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.