Fairy tales of fearless girls

Susannah McFarlane

Book - 2020

Reimagines four classic fairy tales with a feminist twist.

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Subjects
Genres
Fairy tales
Published
New York : Aladdin 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Susannah McFarlane (author)
Other Authors
Beth Norling (illustrator), Claire Robertson, 1972-, Lucinda Gifford, Sher Rill Ng
Edition
First Aladdin hardcover edition
Item Description
Originally published: Crows Nest, Australia : Allen & Unwin, 2018.
Physical Description
118 pages : color illustrations ; 25 cm
Audience
Ages 5-9.
ISBN
9781534473577
  • Rapunzel / illustrated by Beth Norling
  • Little Red Riding Hood / illustrated by Claire Robertson
  • Cinderella / illustrated by Lucinda Gifford
  • Thumbelina / illustrated by Sher Rill Ng.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In McFarlane's four amusingly reimagined fairy tales, hapless heroines are recast as resourceful young women. Rapunzel, an inveterate tinkerer, cuts off her heavy braid and turns it into a zipline to engineer her own escape from the tower: "Rapunzel thought. Rapunzel sketched. Rapunzel planned and pondered." Little Red Riding Hood cleverly uses her grandmother's herbal lore to knock out the wolf with a sedative tea. Cinderella thriftily sells her remaining glass slipper to establish an animal sanctuary, where she is joined by a prince who forswears hunting for mucking stables. And a dauntless Thumbelina puns her way (a happy rabbit is "A hoptimist!") through setbacks to find her own people. Though each tale has a dedicated illustrator, the artwork, rendered throughout in a dull lilac hue, is united by a cartoony sensibility. A satisfying read for children seeking classic tales with a feminist bent. Final art not seen by PW. Publishing simultaneously: Bold Tales of Brave-Hearted Boys. Ages 5--9. (Oct.)

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

These four fairy-tale retellings give traditional characters personality and agency. Rapunzel is a maker, always building and inventing. When she decides to free herself, she calls out to a young man and asks him to tie one end of her severed braid to a tree, turning it into a zip line she can ride down to freedom. Lucy, known as Little Red Riding Hood, is a naturalist and is lured off the path to Grandma's house only by the promise of a rare flower. Her keen observation of the wolf that sends her off-track enables her to recognize him in Grandma's bed and outsmart him. Cinderella's kindness extends to animals, and she sells her one remaining glass slipper to start an animal sanctuary, where the prince eventually joins her. Thumbelina nurses a sick swallow to health and in return receives a ride to her true home. Each story consists of three to five chapters. Half- or full-page monochrome illustrations in mauve on each page fit the fairy-tale theme. McFarlane does a lovely job reimagining these female leads as active, clever characters, though some of the old tropes remain (the obsession with Rapunzel's beauty, which is based on her blue eyes and golden tresses; the ball's purpose is still for the prince to pick a bride). Rapunzel is White; Red Riding Hood is pictured with brown skin and long, wavy hair; Cinderella and her family are White while the godmother and prince are brown. (The illustrations for "Thumbelina" were not seen.) Not revolutionary, but a considerable improvement. (Fiction. 5-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.