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Alain Vaës

Författare till Reynard the Fox

6 verk 125 medlemmar 8 recensioner

Om författaren

Inkluderar namnet: Alain Vaes illus

Verk av Alain Vaës

Reynard the Fox (1994) 61 exemplar
The Princess and the Pea (2001) 36 exemplar
The Porcelain Pepper Pot (1982) 10 exemplar
The Wild Hamster (1985) 9 exemplar
29 Bump Street (1996) 8 exemplar

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The medieval beast epic of Reynard the Fox gets the metafictional treatment in this text-heavy picture-book from author/illustrator Alain Vaës, published in 1994. When the leonine King Harald has doubts about his fitness to rule, his queen calls upon a mysterious hermit living nearby to come to court, and share his wisdom. The hermit relates the story of another lion king, one who had to deal with a troublesome courtier named Reynard - a fox who was always starting feuds with the other animals. The hermit goes on to describe the many incidents of Reynard's history, concluding with his triumph over his wolf adversary in personal combat. Here however, in stark contrast to the traditional story of Reynard, the hermit describes the fox as having a moment of truth upon the battlefield. He realizes that his conflicts with the other animals are pointless, and that he himself is much to blame for his current state. Eventually he is reformed, and appointed Lord High Chancellor of the Animal Kingdom, becoming their first ambassador to the human world. Switching back to the court of King Harald, the narrative follows the mysterious hermit as, story told, he departs for his home. In the final illustration the reader sees a fox tail peeking out from underneath the hermit's robe, revealing that the storyteller has perhaps been Reynard himself...

Alan Vaës' Reynard the Fox was the final text I considered in the research I conducted for my masters dissertation, written on three centuries of Reynard retellings for children in the Anglophone world. It was quite different from every version of the story I had encountered until that point, taking the didactic use of the tale - something evident in all previous tellings - and making that use a part of the main narrative itself, rather than something discussed in forewords, introductions, afterwords, or moral asides. This Reynard is also quite distinct, in that it is the fox himself - if we are to believe that this is what the final illustrations is telling us - who, for the first time, narrates his own story for the reader. Like some of his predecessors in the field of Reynard storytelling for children, Vaës changes the outcome of the story, having his character reform, rather than simply triumph and carry on with his wicked ways. His purpose in doing so however, seems less to do with punishment - many of the other authors who changed the ending did so to kill the fox - and more to do with his vision of Reynard's purpose. This is best expressed by the lion king (the one in the inset story), who declares to Reynard that "You have proved to us more than once that no other animals can match your cleverness and craft, so it is our royal pride in you as one of us to send you forth to demonstrate to the humans that animals can match wits with them and even teach them a thing or two."

With such an unusual take on the Reynard story, both in terms of how it is told and what it means, this picture-book was fascinating to me. It was also beautifully illustrated, and a pleasure to pore over. Recommended to anyone who enjoys revisionist/fractured fairy and folktales, and the fans of the Reynard story.
… (mer)
 
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AbigailAdams26 | 1 annan recension | May 14, 2020 |
The Princess and the Pea is about a prince who is ready to get married, but his mother, the queen is more concerned on her jewel collection. The Queen does not want her son to get married so she makes up ridiculous test's that no young lady can pass. The prince eventually drives away and meets Opal. Opal captures the princes heart and is able to pass the Queen's test. The prince and Opal eventually live happily ever after.

Teaching Ideas: hard work, greed,
 
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aehunter | 5 andra recensioner | Mar 2, 2015 |
The Princess and the Pea is a cute, adapted tale. It's highly rooted in moral values for young readers to grasp. The queen's son wants to marry and he finds love in a unlikely character from "the other side of town". This mentality of an upper and lower side of town is an idea that many students can relate with. Socioeconomic class is something that young students are taught exist and separate people but in this story the prince of upper side and princess of lower fall in love despite all that. Also, the queen's greed for beautiful gems makes her the "evil" vs. the good in this story. From this tale I would hope unconsciously students would be rooting for the prince and princess and not care that they are from different places. In a classroom without diversity this is an important thing to learn, that there are more people outside the walls of school. In a diverse classroom this tale would be a reminder that love, relationships, and a person's value is important despite where they came from.… (mer)
 
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crieder95 | 5 andra recensioner | Jan 21, 2015 |
This is a more up to date version of the classic "The Princess and the Pea." This version involves the Prince's car breaking down and the Princess being there at the right time to help him out. This is during the time that the Prince is looking for a wife, and he falls in love with the Princess, Opal. The Queen wanted all of the jewels so she ordered that no one get married until her son does so that she could have all of the jewels. She became so obsessed with her collection that she would fail each Princess that the Prince presented to her, until she found out that Opal was going to be inheriting lots of jewels. I would use this book to teach about greed and what how it not only hurts others but you as well.… (mer)
 
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ghimbert | 5 andra recensioner | Feb 7, 2013 |

Statistik

Verk
6
Medlemmar
125
Popularitet
#160,151
Betyg
3.9
Recensioner
8
ISBN
7

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