A strange little man helps the miller’s daughter spin straw into gold for the king on the condition that she will give him her first-born child.
Other books by this author
Awful Ogre’s day is much like anyone else’s, but with an ogre-ish twist. He uses onion juice as a mouthwash with just a dab on his chin, writes love letters to a delightfully disgusting ogress and more. The clever rhyming verse and dark-lined illustrations are filled with humor and visual jokes that will make this collection of poetry awfully popular.
Awful Ogre’s Awful Day
“This old man / He played one”: Applying paper-engineering wizardry to the traditional counting rhyme, the Caldecott Medal winner creates a ravishing variation on the pull-the-tab title.
Knick-Knack Paddywack
Zelinsky’s retelling of Rapunzel captures the possessiveness, confinement, and separation of a late 17th-century French tale by Mlle. la Force, where a mother powerfully resists her child’s inevitable growth.