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THE BEATRYCE PROPHECY by Kate DiCamillo Kirkus Star

THE BEATRYCE PROPHECY

by Kate DiCamillo ; illustrated by Sophie Blackall

Pub Date: Sept. 28th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-5362-1361-4
Publisher: Candlewick

DiCamillo returns to fairy-tale mode with the story of a girl destined to unseat a king.

One by one the players take the stage: Answelica, a fearsome goat whose teeth mirror her soul—“large, sharp, and uncompromising”; hapless Brother Edik, who sees beauty everywhere; Beatryce, a bedraggled child who arrives at the monastery knowing only her first name and who shocks the monks by being able to write; Jack Dory, an orphan with a gift for mimicry; and finally Cannoc, an old man who has given up everything except laughter. (There are bad people also, of course, because this story takes place during a time of war, but none of them are given proper names.) Cast out from the monastery and endangered by villains, they take refuge in the dark woods where Beatryce begins to remember more than her name and attempts to answer the question, “what world is this I now inhabit, and how shall I live in it?” The story is told in language as clear and beautiful as an illuminated manuscript, with characters who spring instantly to life. The fairy-tale conventions give it a sense of timelessness and omnipresence without once becoming twee or unwieldy. Blackall’s luminous black-and-white illustrations and medieval-style spot art add to this feeling and are wonderful at conveying emotion through posture, pose, and delicate linework. Characters are described and drawn as White.

A book with an angelic soul: large, sharp, and uncompromising.

(Fairy tale. 8-14)