A sly jackal gets his comeuppance in this bland tale from southwest Africa. Terrified by Jackal's empty threats, a mother...

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JACKAL'S FLYING LESSON: A Khoikhoi Tale

A sly jackal gets his comeuppance in this bland tale from southwest Africa. Terrified by Jackal's empty threats, a mother dove throws her babies out of the nest to be gobbled up. Crane exacts revenge; offering to teach Jackal to fly, she sticks a few feathers to him, carries him up into the sky, and drops him. The baby doves pop out unharmed, and Jackal slinks off to the river to wash off. Gottlieb's rounded, expressive animal figures are rendered with appealingly simple, flowing brushwork, but young readers will be shocked to see a mother throwing her children away and are unlikely to find Jackal's punishment -- which amounts to minor discomfiture -- particularly amusing. Insensitive at best; Aardema (Misoso, 1994, etc.) generally chooses better. Stick with Gerald McDermott's Coyote or Tololwa Mollel's Flying Tortoise (both 1994).

Pub Date: June 1, 1995

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Apple Soup/Knopf

Review Posted Online: N/A

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 1995

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