Interstellar Cinderella

Deborah Underwood

Book - 2015

In this outer space adaptation of the fairy tale in rhyme, Cinderella dreams of becoming a spaceship mechanic.

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jE/Underwood
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Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jE/Underwood Due Apr 11, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Stories in rhyme
Picture books
Published
San Francisco : Chronicle Books [2015]
Language
English
Main Author
Deborah Underwood (author)
Other Authors
Meg Hunt (illustrator)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9781452125329
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* In lilting, bouncy quatrains, this galactic take on Cinderella casts the put-upon daughter as an aspiring spaceship engineer. The prince's royal space parade is finally here, but Cinderella's evil stepmother and stepsisters take her prized tools and abandon her on a planetoid. Luckily, her fairy godrobot arrives just in time to give her brand-new tools, a sparkly but practical! spacesuit, and a powergem to fuel her ship, though it will only last till midnight. Off to the space parade flies pink-haired Cinderella, but when she arrives, she finds the prince's ship is aflame. She impresses the young royal with her engineering expertise but flees at midnight, leaving her sonic socket wrench behind. When he finally finds her, the smitten prince proposes, but Cinderella demurs, I'm far too young for marriage / but I'll be your chief mechanic! Underwood's jaunty lines and girl-power take on the classic tale is a perfect match for Hunt's jewel-toned illustrations. Layered swaths of rich, saturated color amid swooping lines and dynamic shapes cultivate a lively interspace atmosphere, and the figures, looking something like a more expressionistic, swirly version of The Jetsons, give the whole package a playfully retro-futurist look. A joy to read aloud, this cheery tale is an empowering paean to following dreams, whatever they may be.--Hunter, Sarah Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Like Cinder for the picture-book crowd, this futuristic take on Cinderella recasts the heroine as a skilled mechanic, one who studies rocket-ship repair late into the night. With her wide eyes, pink hair, and work goggles, Hunt's Cinderella looks like she's stepped out of a contemporary indie webcomic, and her extraterrestrial world hints at mid-century illustration influences. Writing in playful, clever rhymes, Underwood (The Quiet Book) gives this Cinderella welcome agency and independence. Yes, her fairy godrobot (who resembles a stylish update of Rosie from The Jetsons) hooks her up with an atomic blue space suit, but it's up to Cinderella to fix the ship that she pilots to the Royal Space Parade. Cinderella and the prince bond after she repairs his ship (their budding friendship isn't just interplanetary but interracial, too), and when he asks her to be his bride, "She thought this over carefully./ Her family watched in panic./ `I'm far too young for marriage,/ but I'll be your chief mechanic!'?" It's another strong showing from Underwood, and a notable debut for Hunt. Ages 3-5. Author's agent: Erin Murphy, Erin Murphy Literary Agency. Illustrator's agency: Scott Hull Associates. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

K-Gr 2-In this galactic retelling of the beloved children's story, Cinderella has a knack for repair. With the help of her sidekick, a robotic mouse named Murgatroyd, she tinkers with her stepmother's household appliances, but dreams of repairing spaceships. When an invitation to the Prince's Royal Space Parade arrives, the evil stepmother and her daughters leave Cinderella stranded, zooming into space with her toolbox. With the help of her fairy godrobot, Cinderella fixes a broken rocket and then dons a bejeweled atomic blue space suit, to race across the "starry sky" and join the crowds at the parade. When the royal ship has engine trouble, Interstellar Cinderella comes to the rescue. The grateful prince whisks her away to the Gravity Free Ball. At midnight, Cinderella has to run away, but the couple is reunited when the prince searches the cosmos for her. In a modern twist, Cinderella rejects his marriage proposal, but agrees to become his chief mechanic. The rhyming text is accompanied by somewhat jumbled illustrations painted in shadowy browns, greens, and blues. Cinderella resembles a Disney princess with her wide eyes, red hair and determined expression. The appropriately themed endpapers showcase an array of her space-age tools and gadgets. VERDICT An interesting take on a classic fairy tale.-Linda L. Walkins, Saint Joseph Preparatory High School, Boston, MA © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

Once upon a planetoid, / amid her tools and sprockets, / a girl named Cinderella dreamed / of fixing fancy rockets, but this wide-eyed, pink-haired Cinderella is relegated to repairing robot dishwashers and zoombrooms. Shes stranded on her planetoid while her stepfamily zooms off to attend the princes Royal Space Paradeuntil her fairy godrobot arrives with tools Cinderella can use to fix her broken rocket, plus a jeweled space suit and a power gem that will fuel the ship until midnight. Thats enough time for Cinderella to fix the princes spaceship and float with him at the Gravity-Free Ball but, true to the source material, not enough time for them to exchange contact information. The prince searches for a girl who can fix a spaceship (Cinderella has left her sonic socket wrench behind); once found, Cinderella tells him shes too young for marriage but will happily be his chief mechanic. Cinder (rev. 1/12) for a younger set, this retelling focuses on what Cinderella can do, not what she can wear. (Glass slippers, after all, wouldnt be practical in space.) Though the meter occasionally falters, Underwood finds clever ways to tell a celestial tale within a rhyming text. Hunts illustrations -- using gouache, brush and ink, graphite, rubylith, and digital process -- incorporate muted pinks, purples, and greens to give the setting a zippy sci-fi feel. shoshana flax (c) Copyright 2015. 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.