Booklist Online - The Tale of Despereaux, by Kate DiCamillo (REVIEW)
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Books For Youth - Fiction - Fantasy

  Award winner

The Tale of Despereaux.


DiCamillo, Kate (author).

Illustrated by Timothy Basil Ering.
Sept. 2003. 272p. Candlewick, hardcover, $17.99 (0-7636-1722-9). Grades 3-6.
REVIEW. First published July, 2003 (Booklist).

Forgiveness, light, love, and soup. These essential ingredients combine into a tale that is as soul stirring as it is delicious. Despereaux, a tiny mouse with huge ears, is the bane of his family’s existence. He has fallen in love with the young princess who lives in the castle where he resides and, having read of knights and their ladies, vows to “honor her.” But his unmouselike behavior gets him banished to the dungeon, where a swarm of rats kill whoever falls into their clutches. Another story strand revolves around Miggery, traded into service by her father, who got a tablecloth in return. Mig’s desire to be a princess, a rat’s yen for soup (a food banished from the kingdom after a rat fell in a bowl and killed the queen), and Despereaux’s quest to save his princess after she is kidnapped climax in a classic fairy tale, rich and satisfying. Part of the charm comes from DiCamillo’s deceptively simple style and short chapters in which the author addresses the reader: “Do you think rats do not have hearts? Wrong. All living things have a heart.” And as with the best stories, there are important messages tucked in here and there, so subtly that children who are carried away by the words won’t realize they have been uplifted until much later. Ering’s soft pencil illustrations reflect the story’s charm. — Ilene Cooper

 

 
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Features That Discuss This Work:
1. Notable Children's Books : 2004
2. Newbery Medal Winner : 2004
3. Top 10 Fantasy Books for Youth : 2004
4. Core Collection : Social Class in Youth Fiction
5. Booklist Editors' Choice : Books for Youth, 2003
6. Booklist Editors' Choice : 2003
7. Booklist Video : Kate DiCamillo

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