| Price:
$16.95
School & Library Binding: 63 pages
Dimensions (in inches): 0.42 x 10.29 x 7.25
Publisher:Holiday House; (March 1994)
ISBN: 082341020X

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In folktales, simple acts of kindness
can have enormous consequences. Here, in a fairy tale told in eight
chapters, Frol, a humble archer, spares a white dove, and is rewarded
with "the most wonderful story," its wondrous characters
including a beautiful princess with magic powers, turned into a
bird by an evil wizard's spell; a dead czar in a fiery pit; and
a giant cat as big as a mountain. The miracle of the dove raconteuse
is only the beginning, for bird and archer must then contend with
a cruel and paranoid czar and his chief minister. They see Frol
as a threat and Frolya the dove only as a desirable marvel. To eliminate
Frol, they send him on impossible quests, sealing their own doom,
for he thus enacts Frolya's prophetic tale, releases her from the
curse and overthrows them. Kimmel (see The Three Princes , above)
spins a complex, substantial tale with a peasant's acidic perspective
on unjust rulers (most notably when Frol meets the dead czar); Diane
Wolkstein's agreeable adaptation of the same story, Oom Razoom ,
is by comparison a lighthearted fantasy. Sauber ( Gray Fox ) provides
suitable if skimpy accompaniment, contributing to each chapter one
richly colored illustration decorated with Russian folk motifs.
Ages 6-10.
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