A world full of animal stories

Angela McAllister

Book - 2017

Retells fifty animal-themed tales from around the world. This collection of fifty lively retellings by Angela McAllister of favorite animal-themed fables, myths, legends, and stories about creatures big and small from different cultures.

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Frances Lincoln Children's Books, an imprint of The Quarto Group 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
Angela McAllister (author)
Other Authors
Aitch (Illustrator) (illustrator)
Item Description
"Quarto knows."--Title page verso.
Physical Description
127 pages : color illustrations ; 29 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 126-127).
ISBN
9781786030450
  • AFRICA: The ten little ostriches (Kenya)
  • Why the cheetah;s cheeks are stained with tears (Zulu)
  • Why hippo lives in the water (East Africa)
  • Ananse and the Python (Ghana)
  • The ants and the treasure (Nigeria)
  • The leopard and the ram (West Africa)
  • Why the warthog is ugly (East Africa).
  • ASIA: The elephant and the blind men (India)
  • The white butterfly (Japan)
  • The country of the mice (Tibet)
  • The farmer and the mule (India)
  • The lion and the clever jackals (India)
  • Urashima and the turtle (Japan)
  • The nodding tiger (China)
  • The legend of the panda (Tibet)
  • How the jellyfish lost his bones (Japan).
  • NORTH AMERICA: Buffalo and eagle wing (Blackfoot)
  • Prairie wolf (Karuk)
  • The mermaid of the Magdalenes (Canada)
  • Why the swallow's tail is forked (Native American Indian)
  • Rabbit and the moon man (Canada)
  • Why the bear has a stumpy tail (Iroquois)
  • The blind boy and the loon (Inuit)
  • The first woodpecker (Native American Indian)
  • The badger and the bear (Lakota)
  • How the king of the birds was chosen (Mayan)
  • The bear prince (Mexico)
  • Coyote and the turtle (Mexico).
  • SOUTH AMERICA: The little frog of the stream (Peru)
  • The song of the armadillo (Bolivia)
  • The two viscachas (Argentina)
  • The party in the sky (Brazil)
  • How the beetles got their gorgeous coats (Brazil).
  • EUROPE: The nightingale (Denmark)
  • The three billy goats gruff (Norway)
  • The owl of cowlyd coomb (Wales)
  • King of the cats (Scotland)
  • Dapplegrim (Norway)
  • The eagle and the wren (Scotland)
  • Saint Domnoc and the bees (Ireland)
  • The three little pigs (England)
  • Mighty Mikko (Finland)
  • The speckled hen (France)
  • The white parrot (Spain)
  • The ugly duckling (Denmark).
  • AUSTRALIA AND OCEANIA: How the kangaroo got her pouch (Australia)
  • Nanaue, the shark boy (Hawaii)
  • Paikea and Ruatapu (New Zealand)
  • Emu and the brush turkey (Australia)
  • How the flying fish lived in a tree (Papua New Guinea)
  • Appendix.
Review by Booklist Review

In her last anthology (A Year Full of Stories, 2016), McAllister collected 52 stories from around the world and presented them in a yearlong calendar format. Now, she takes a similar approach with this compendium of animal tales. This collection is arranged by continent, and it offers stories from a wide range of cultures, with the African and North American (primarily Native American) sections particularly varied. Most English-speaking readers will likely be familiar with a handful of the European stories (The Three Billy Goats Gruff from Norway, The Three Little Pigs from England, The Ugly Duckling from Denmark), while other stories represent another culture's variation of a familiar story (The Bear Prince from Mexico has shades of Beauty and the Beast and East of the Sun, West of the Moon). Still, most of these stories will be entirely new to younger readers. Aitch's folk-style illustrations, primarily spot art but occasionally full spreads, add flavor to the brief one-to-three-page tales. A colorful collection that encourages readers to learn more about other cultures.--Reagan, Maggie Copyright 2018 Booklist

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

In a companion to A Year Full of Stories, McAllister compiles 50 folktales from around the world, retelling them in clear, straightforward prose. Grouped by continent, the stories offer light morals and "just-so" style explanations about animal characteristics and behavior: in "How the Jellyfish Lost His Bones," a rather grim Japanese tale in which the Dragon King who rules the sea removes Jellyfish's shell and leg bones as punishment after the creature fails to retrieve a monkey's liver to heal the queen. Readers will recognize European tales such as "The Three Little Pigs" and "The Ugly Duckling," but most of the international tales will likely be new to many children. Rich with imagery and magical happenings, this treasury offers plenty to captivate readers, and Aitch's pencil and watercolor art neatly bridges the stories' varied settings. Ages 6-9. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Horn Book Review

Mostly culled from early-twentieth century folklore collections, these accessible retellings are organized by region: Africa, Asia, North America, South America, and Australia and Oceania. The short tales, presented in small print in two columns, include familiar and lesser-known tales. The folkloric spot- and full-page illustrations are more decorative than dramatic. Bib. (c) Copyright 2019. 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

A cornucopia of retold myths and fables gathered from every inhabited continent.With quaint disregard for rigorous authenticity, McAllister draws largely on old public-domain sources written for general audiences (most of which she helpfully cites at the end) for these 50 tales, tones down overtly violent incidents, and delivers animal-centered episodes that are stylistically similar no matter their (purported) ethnic or regional origins. Looking a bit crammed-in thanks to small type and narrow line spacing, the one- to four-page entries mix familiar stories such as "The Three Little Pigs" (featuring a brick-laying sow named Curly and a wolf who runs away singed but alive) and "The Elephant and the Blind Men" with some semifamiliar entries like "The Bear Prince"ascribed to "Mexico" but actually reading like a version of the European "Bearskin" with a coyote shoehorned inand a variety of lower-profile trickster and pourquoi tales. These include why cheetahs have tear tracks beneath their eyes, why pandas are black and white, why warthogs are ugly, and why bears have stumpy tails. In flat, folk-art-style compositions the Romanian-born illustrator scatters a broad variety of small realistic or anthropomorphic animals over stylized landscapes and interior scenes with human figures that are diverse of skin color and facial features but clad in likewise stylized generic national dress.Broad of scope but parochially Eurocentric in style and vision. (Folk tales. 9-11) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.