Elves & the Shoemaker

Hardback

Main Details

Title Elves & the Shoemaker
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Jim LaMarche
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:32
Dimensions(mm): Height 287,Width 236
ISBN/Barcode 9780811834773
ClassificationsDewey:813.54
Audience
General
Children's (6-12)
Illustrations Ill.(some col.)

Publishing Details

Publisher Chronicle Books
Imprint Chronicle Books
Publication Date 1 December 2003
Publication Country United States

Description

The classic tale of elfin magic is made new by an artist of international acclaim. Stunning paintings, reminiscent of the award winner's earlier work in "The Rainbabies," complement this favorite Brothers Grimm fairy tale. Full color.

Author Biography

Jim LaMarche is the award-winning illustrator of 12 picture books (including The Rainbabies by Laura Krauss Melmed) and the author-illustrator of two (The Raft and The Elves and the Shoemaker). He grew up in Kewaskum, Wisconsin, and now lives in California with his wife and three sons.

Reviews

LaMarche creates a set of honey-toned illustrations that make the familiar Grimm tale less an odd encounter with the supernatural than a warm-hearted exchange of gifts. Aside from clothing the elves, he makes no major change to the plot. Finely made shoes that are cobbled mysteriously each night from leather left on his worktable turn a shoemaker's fortunes around: one night, as Christmas approaches, he and his wife hide out, and spy two elves - depicted as merry-eyed, touseld children dressed in rough burlap - creeping through the window to do the deed. At his wife's suggestion, they make tiny new outfits for their benefactors, who delightedly skip about the room and out the door. Set in an old style, very well-kept town with cobbled streets, but bicycles and electricity too, this timeless tale will leave readers suffused with the pleasure of seeing gifts received and appreciated. -Kirkus Reviews, starred review As in his award-winning book The Rainbabies, LaMarche sets every picture glowing, whether with lamplight, starlight, shafts of morning sunlight or just some inner light that all the characters in this kindliest of tales seem to possess. - The Washington Post