Synopses & Reviews
Review
'Professional storyteller Lunge-Larsen presents eight short tales, retold or intevented, featuring magical creatures that lurk just out of sight...Krommes provides handsome borders and stylized full-page illustrations that give this gathering a suitably folktale feel.'
Review
'The author draws on a rich tradition of legends and myths, retelling them in an accessible manner that will captivate readers.'
Review
The author draws on a rich tradition of legends and myths, retelling them in an accessible manner that will captivate readers.
School Library Journal, Starred
The intimate and chatty tone of the text...encourages confidence in the teller's veracity and repeated reading of the collection.
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
The tales of mysterious Northern European creatures inspire enchanting scratchboard illustration in a folk-tradition.
Publishers Weekly
These small, delightful tales are fabulously illustrated...it's very easy to see elves, gnomes, and dwarves being comfortable in such places.
Kirkus Reviews
Professional storyteller Lunge-Larsen presents eight short tales, retold or intevented, featuring magical creatures that lurk just out of sight...Krommes provides handsome borders and stylized full-page illustrations that give this gathering a suitably folktale feel.
Booklist, ALA
Synopsis
Selkies, fairies, gnomes, hill folk, river spritesand#151;do you believe in them? Perhaps among the flowers, beside a mountain, or near deep waters youand#8217;ve caught a glimpse, once or twice, of what you thought might be the silvery shadow of a dwarf, or a hint of a fairyand#8217;s wing, or the tail of the water horse. Or was it just the odd light of dusk or dawn playing tricks? As Lise Lunge-Larsenand#8217;s magical, timeless stories reveal and Beth Krommesand#8217;s enchanting scratchboard illustrations capture, the hidden folk are there, all right: you just have to know whereand#151;and howand#151;to look.
About the Author
'Lise Lunge-Larsen is an award-winning author and a professionalstoryteller. Born and raised in Norway, she lives with her family in thehills of Duluth, Minnesota, where she is frequently spotted playing inthe snow with her felted mittens.Beth Krommes said that she first fell in love with meadows and the outdoors on childhood trips to her grandmother\'s house, surrounded by meadows, on the side of Sugarloaf Mountain in Pennsylvania. She is the illustrator of Phyllis Root\'s Grandmother Winter and Lise Lunge-Larsen\'s The Hidden Folk. She lives in Peterborough, New Hampshire.'