From School Library Journal
Starred Review. Kindergarten-Grade
4–Beginning with pages that open vertically instead of horizontally, this
tongue-in-cheek tale takes a typical love story and sets it squarely–and
amusingly–on end. Ross's vibrantly hued pen-and-ink and watercolor cartoons
depict the edge of a pond where a caterpillar and a tadpole meet and fall in
love: "She was his beautiful rainbow, and he was her shiny black pearl." Perched
on a leaf above the water, she smiles down at her sweetheart and asks him to
"Promise you'll never change." Although he agrees, some vows are difficult to
keep, and when they next meet, he has sprouted two legs. She forgives him, but
after he breaks his promise twice more and now looks more like a frog than her
"shiny black pearl," the lovelorn larva ends the affair and cries herself to
sleep (sequestered in a cocoon). Meanwhile, the melancholy frog sulks around the
pond, making heart-shaped air bubbles that rise to the surface and burst. When
the caterpillar awakens, now a butterfly, she decides to forgive her beloved and
flies above the water to find him. Without a thought, the frog swallows her
whole, and then returns to wondering about whatever happened to his "beautiful
rainbow." Willis strikes the perfect balance between the deadpan telling and the
humorously overblown dialogue shared by the star-crossed pair, while the artwork
masterfully enhances each and every nuance. Enjoy this funny story on its own
merits or try using it to lighten up a science lesson.–Joy Fleishhacker,
School Library Journal
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
"Beginning with pages that open vertically instead of horizontally, this
tongue-in-cheek tale takes a typical love story and sets it squarely and
amusingly on end. Ross's vibrantly hued pen-and-ink and watercolor cartoons
depict the edge of the pond where a caterpillar and a tadpole meet and fall in
love. . . Willis strikes the perfect balance between the deadpan telling and the
humorously overblown dialogue shared by the star-crossed pair, while the artwork
masterfully enhances each and every nuance.' —School Library
Journal
"Breaks the mould in form as well as content." —Sunday Times
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