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Algernon and Other Cautionary Tales; Matilda, Who told such Dreadful Lies.....; The Bad Child's Book of Beasts

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BfK No. 78 - January 1993

Cover story
On the front of BfK this month is the cover of Yesterday by Adèle Geras. The artwork is by Carolyn Piggford. This book is one from the 'Teenage Memoirs' series published by Walker (see the article, All Their Yesterdays, in this issue) and Adèle, of course, is the subject of our Authorgraph - see centre-spread. Our thanks to Walker Books for their help in using this illustration.

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Algernon and Other Cautionary Tales

Hilaire Belloc
 Quentin Blake
(Red Fox)
978-0099964803, RRP £4.99, Paperback
8-10 Junior/Middle
Buy "Algernon and Other Cautionary Tales (Red Fox picture books)" on Amazon

Matilda, Who told such Dreadful Lies.....

Hilaire Belloc
 Posy Simmonds
(Alfred A Knopf , New York)
978-0099983606, RRP £4.50, Hardcover
8-10 Junior/Middle
Buy "Matilda, Who Told Such Dreadful Lies and Was Burned to Death (Red Fox picture books)" on Amazon

The Bad Child's Book of Beasts

Hilaire Belloc
 Tony Ross
(Red Fox)
978-0099983507, RRP £3.99, Paperback
8-10 Junior/Middle
Buy "The Bad Child's Book of Beasts (Red Fox picture books)" on Amazon

The latest re-issues of Belloc's classic verse, which was originally published around the turn of the century, are very handsomely produced; big, bold print is given plenty of clear white space in which to make its impact, and a trio of illustrious illustrators provide a wealth of dramatically outlandish graphics.

I loaned these books to a group of Year 5 and 6 readers and found it very difficult to retrieve them, as they passed from hand to hand so rapidly. The children enjoyed the unforced rhythms and rhymes of both the bestiary and the cautionary tales, and they were delighted by the vivacity with which the illustrators bring to life (and, as often as not, put to death) the various brats and pests who inhabit these pages. They particularly enjoyed the casual bizarreness and grisly endings of the cautionary verses, though the relish with which these accounts of being flattened, eaten alive, internally strangled, blown up and burnt to death were greeted bodes ill for the efficacy of the books as a source of moral development!

Reviewer: 
George Hunt
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