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LOVABYE DRAGON

A strong and hopeful tale

When the tears of a young princess trickle onto a dragon, a sweet friendship is born.

With lovely lilting words, Joosse creates a friendship born out of loneliness and tears between a young princess who longs for a dragon and a friendly dragon who dreams of a girl for a friend. The beginning half of the story builds up to their first meeting, as the girl weeps a stream of tears and the dragon follows it across the landscape to her room in the castle. “I am here!” roars Dragon. “You’re a dear!” whispers Girl. The dragon is big, the princess is little. Though great, their differences on the outside are no match for the bond of friendship that helps keep the monsters away. The remainder of the book is a love fest of happiness and togetherness, as the two friends find each other and find out about each other. Strong musicality in the text makes for a sing-along feel, almost like a nursery rhyme. "Snore-asleep was the dragon / dream-asleep was the dragon / but the trickle of tears / little tickle of tears / woke him up. / Gluk!" The oil-painting illustrations are muted and hazy, giving the tale a dreamlike quality full of nighttime blues, browns and purples. With on-the-dark-side skin and stylized pigtails, the princess has enough ethnic ambiguity for refreshingly inclusive appeal.

A strong and hopeful tale . (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: Sept. 11, 2012

ISBN: 978-0-7636-5408-5

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Candlewick

Review Posted Online: July 17, 2012

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2012

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EVERMORE DRAGON

A beguiling read-aloud for more than princess-and-dragon lovers.

The comforting friendship between a young girl and an enormous dragon deepens.

In Lovabye Dragon (2012), Joosse shared a hopeful tale of sweet friendship between an unlikely pair. Moving on from the first book, the friendship continues to grow here with an innocent game of hide-and-seek. Doesn’t Girl see the dragon hiding behind a very small rock? Both children and adults reading this story will chuckle, though for slightly different reasons. The two friends delight in their togetherness. When Girl takes her turn to hide, she runs to a faraway hidey-hole and becomes lost in the night, separated from Dragon. “But she cried silver tears / worry worry tears / and her heart thumped a sound / a trem-below sound / that only Dragon friends, / very very special friends, can hear.” So summoned, the distressed Dragon flies to her rescue: “I am here,” he rumbles; Girl whispers, “You’re a dear.” Although the theme of rescue seems similar to the first title, the thoughtfully constructed, rhythmic text sprinkled with clever neologisms moves the action forward, while the comforting palette of hazy grays, blues, and browns keeps the distress minimal. The teary and frightened Girl shines in her starlike yellow gown, muted yet hope-filled on the dreamy pages.

A beguiling read-aloud for more than princess-and-dragon lovers. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: Aug. 4, 2015

ISBN: 978-0-7636-6882-2

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Candlewick

Review Posted Online: April 28, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2015

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HAVE YOU SEEN MY BLANKIE?

A humorous rhyming romp in which the usual fairy-tale villains are friends. (Picture book. 3-6)

Alice, the princess in the palace, loves her blankie, but it’s missing, so the search is on.

Her brother, Jack, used it as a curtain until a giant stole it to use as a hankie, until a witch flew off with it and made a cloak from it, until it was taken by…a cranky-looking dragon who happens to be snoring on it when Alice finds them. Alice is cranky herself but halts a brief blankie tug of war for a better solution: finding the dragon his own bedtime snuggly. It’s not easy. The dragon grows increasingly weepy, but he won’t snuggle with the witch’s “far too scratchy” cat, the giant’s feather pillow (it makes him sneeze), or Jack’s stinky socks. What can Alice do? A thorough search of the palace finally yields the dragon’s perfect snuggly and earns Alice a lifelong friend and protector. Muted mixed-media cartoon illustrations create rich backstories for each character combined with a sophisticated, smoothly reading rhyme scheme to produce a fast-moving friendship story that problem-solving young children will appreciate. Princess Alice, Prince Jack, and the giant present as dark-haired white characters.

A humorous rhyming romp in which the usual fairy-tale villains are friends. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-5362-0819-1

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Nosy Crow

Review Posted Online: June 15, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2019

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