The Folk Tale Classics Heirloom
Library. By Paul Galdone. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $19.99.
The Folk Tale Classics Keepsake
Library. By Paul Galdone. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $19.99.
Prolific children’s
author and artist Paul Galdone (1907-1986) is perhaps best known for his work
with Eve Titus on the Basil of Baker
Street series and the Caldecott Honor books Anatole and Anatole and the
Cat. The first tale of Basil and the
two of Anatole all date to the 1950s, but Galdone continued working to the end
of his life, illustrating more than 300 books in all and producing quite a few
retellings of classic folk tales.
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt has periodically reissued the Galdone
storybooks, and now offers two four-book collections that, separately or
together, can easily become the cornerstone of a young child’s very own
library.
Despite the
collections’ slightly different names, there is no real difference between them
– any book in one could just as well have gone in the other. The Heirloom
set includes The Gingerbread Boy
(originally published in 1975), Little
Red Riding Hood (1974), The Three
Billy Goats Gruff (1973) and The
Three Little Pigs (1970). In the Keepsake set are The Little Red Hen (1973), The
Town Mouse and the Country Mouse (1971), Three Little Kittens (1986) and The
Three Bears (1972). Families that
want to buy just one set will not go wrong with either; picking one or the
other is a matter of personal taste – it will depend on which stories parents
or children like best, or the ones with which they are most (or least!)
familiar.
One thing Galdone does
particularly well in his illustrations is to provide them with humor or
emphasize the amusement that is already there in the narrative. In The
Gingerbread Boy, for example, high points are the horse’s wide-eyed
expression as it chases the gingerbread boy, and the enormous nose and flyaway
hair of the bridge troll who threatens the goats. The stories themselves are told pretty much
in traditional form. The pileup of
people and animals chasing the gingerbread boy is well narrated and well
pictured, and the troll’s threats and eventual comeuppance (he is head-butted
into the river) are both effective and funny.
And there is a little “snip, snap” to the book: “Snip, Snap, Snip, at last and at last he went the way of every
single gingerbread boy that ever came out of an oven.” In fact, Galdone likes the phrase “snip,
snap,” also including it in The Three
Billy Goats Gruff, where he ends the story with, “So snip, snap, snout,/
This tale’s told out.”
Galdone also does an
excellent job of showing the characters’ personalities. For example, in The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse, based on one of Aesop’s
fables, the elegantly dressed town mouse refers to the country mouse’s home as
a “dismal place” and the food as “rustic fare,” luring his old friend to court
with tales of “dancing and feasting and all kinds of merriment.” So the humble country mouse – dressed like a
friar, in a plain brown robe tied with rope – heads to town with his friend,
and indeed encounters a table where “there were creams and jellies and
sweetmeats,” plus fine cheese and delicious champagne. But there are also threats, with which the
town mouse is quite familiar but the country mouse is not: Galdone’s drawings
of the open-mouthed, large-fanged cat and the scowling servants (seen from
mouse height) clearly communicate the country mouse’s terror. Galdone is careful to give the stories’
morals when they have them – here, “‘What good is elegance without ease, or
plenty with an aching heart?’” But with
such morals or without them, these are stories that 21st-century
families can enjoy time and time again, and the Heirloom and Keepsake
collections of Galdone’s versions of the tales are an excellent way to do so.
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