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[ ¼Áö Á¤º¸ ]
Hardcover: 40 pages
ISBN-10: 0803728182
ISBN-13: 978-0803728189
Ã¥ Å©±â: 28.5cm x 22.5cm
[ ¿µ¹® ¼Æò ]
Book Description
Peterkin, a colorful elf, brings music and hope everywhere he goes with the aid of his magic pipe. It gives him the power to call any animal to him, and even to transform one creature into another. This is just what the evil Grand Duke needs to rid his village of its never-ending rats. But when Peter turns the rats into stars, the Grand Duke is still as mean as ever. Discover the pipe¡¯s true magic as our hero uses it to inspire and save the whole village.
Steven Kellogg¡¯s clever new take on The Pied Piper of Hamelin is friendly, whimsical, and full of surprise.
From School Library Journal
This peppy new rendition bears little resemblance to the original legend. The story focuses on Peterkin, a happy elf who stumbles upon a gloomy retired witch named Elbavol. His attempts to cheer her fail, but she sends him off with a magic pipe, which plays the sound of letters. Spelling a word calls it forth, and reversing the letters changes it into something else. So when Peterkin comes to a city plagued by rats and run by a cruel Grand Duke, he uses his pipe to call up the rats and then changes them into stars. However, he still must claim his reward from the Duke. Clever readers may guess the mystery behind Elbavol's name before Peterkin does. This story does not have the haunting, thought-provoking qualities of the legend, nor is it very scary - even the rats are cute. Bright cartoon illustrations in sunshine yellows burst with colorful hearts, flowers, and rainbows except for in the contrasting dark, decrepit areas surrounding Elbavol. Children will enjoy this story without knowing the original tale, but to know only this version would be a shame.
From Booklist
¡°Long ago and far away,¡± a good-natured elf named Peterkin became a Pied Piper. He played the ¡°sounds of letters¡± on a magic pipe given to him by a gloomy witch. When he played letters that spelled something, the item he spelled magically appeared. When he flipped over backward, the letters were reversed and the creature was transformed into that object - hence ¡°deer¡± became a ¡°reed.¡± Peterkin came upon a dark city ruled by the evil Grand Duke and overrun by rats. Not only did Peterkin transform the ¡°rats¡± to ¡°stars,¡± he made the Grand Duke ¡°loveable¡± and enabled the families in the city to transform their environment into a wonderful, welcoming paradise. Kellogg has taken a few elements of the Pied Piper of Hamelin; mixed in bright, sparkly, swirling illustrations in which even the rats are adorable; and whipped them into a happy-ever-after story that bears little resemblance to the original dark fairy tale. |
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