The King's Golden Beard

by Klaas Verplancke (Author)

Reading Level: 2nd − 3rd Grade

Who's to blame when a vain, heedless king meets his comeuppance? He is, of course! Fans of Tomi Ungerer's mischievous humor and Jon Agee's sly morality tales will be delighted by this hilarious read-aloud about a long, long beard and its short-sighted royal owner, by a popular Belgian illustrator, designer, and animation whiz.

The lush, golden royal beard is a wondrous thing - especially to the king himself. He spends his days admiring and grooming it, and passes laws making it a crime punishable by death for anyone else's face to sport even a single hair. As the people of the kingdom nervously shave daily, the royal beard grows and grows until it appears at the palace's back gate.

What happens next will have readers laughing along -- and cheering for the astronomers who, unlike the tyrannical king, know that the earth is round.

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Kirkus Reviews

Deeply satisfying.

Booklist

Rapunzel has nothing on the vainglorious king from this sly cautionary [picture book] .... "The law may be the law, but some laws are bad for your health," a new king remarks with distinct schadenfreude. Readers fond of Jon Klassen's karmic tales will agree.

Publishers Weekly

This clever, biting little fable looks on as a vain ruler passes a series of laws to protect "his kingly self and his beautiful beard." Readers can't see the king; luxuriant, silvery-blond hair covers his body, a creepy red-lipped smile visible through the thicket. Soldiers with stick arms and legs rake the beard and carry it reverently. The king proclaims that ordinary subjects are not permitted beards--rule breakers will be "cut into a thousand pieces with a pinchy pair of nail scissors!" In dark, stylish before-and-after spreads, animate and inanimate subjects show the law's consequences: a broom loses its bristles, a pirate turns out to be naked behind a once-ample blue beard, and a cactus loses its spines. At last, the monarch's beard grows all the way around the world and returns to annoy the kingly presence, with terrible consequences (or just deserts, depending upon the reader's take). Verplancke skewers narcissism and willful ignorance, too, as the ruler's belief that the Earth is flat interferes with his understanding that the invading beard might, in fact, be his own. Ages 4-8. (Feb.)

Copyright 2020 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

School Library Journal

Gr 1-3--A fanatical king grows his golden beard so long that it extends out of his window, down the pathway, and around the world. As he keeps a watchful eye on its growth, he becomes obsessed with it. He wants to be the only one in the land with a beard. So he drafts a rule that no one in the land may grow a single inch of hair on their face, or else risk paying a severe price. Everyone is required to shave immediately. One day, a palace guard spots a beard in the distance, and the king demands that the culprit pay the price for breaking his rule because "the law is the law." The palace guards follow their king's orders precisely, much to his detriment. Despite the violence of the command, the king's demise is rather benign on the page, making this a fun way to introduce readers to concepts such as self-indulgence and abuse of power. Using three main colors, the palette is consistent and engaging. Readers will be immersed in the fine details of the king's beard and the palace guards' efforts to carry out the punishment. VERDICT An enjoyable read, a worthy addition to any library, and a useful tool for teaching humility and respect.--Maegen Rose, Rye Country Day Sch., NY

Copyright 2021 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes

"What once might have been 'long ago' seems eerily not so long ago at all." — The New York Times

"A new children's classic...will warrant entry into your forever library....playful, weird, funny, absurd, and wil make elementary-aged children laugh out loud....one of those picture books that kids will laugh at and adults won't mind reading over and over." —Daddy Mojo

"A fairy tale for our unusual times. Verplancke hopes the book will help children (and their respective parents) understand the danger of absolute power, narcissism, selfishness and ignorance of science and knowledge."— Steven Heller, The Daily Heller/PRINT

Klaas Verplancke
Klaas Verplancke is an author, illustrator, animator and professor of illustration whose clients include The New Yorker, The New York Times, and MOMA. A finalist for the Hans Christian Andersen Medal for illustration and a frequent nominee for the Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award, Verplancke has written and illustrated books that have won the prestigious Bologna Ragazzi Award and been selected for the White Raven and IBBY Honor lists. In the spring of 2020, his animated poster "Save Lives. Live Safe. #keepdistance" appeared on Times Square screens, the double-sided Lincoln Tunnel billboard, and 1,800 linkNYC screens throughout New York City and was promoted via interviews on PBS Newshour and more.
Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9781662650390
Lexile Measure
-
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Mineditionus
Publication date
March 20, 2021
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV019000 - Juvenile Fiction | Humorous Stories
JUV034000 - Juvenile Fiction | Royalty (kings queens princes princesses knights etc.)
JUV061000 - Juvenile Fiction | Politics & Government
Library of Congress categories
Kings, queens, rulers, etc
Kings and rulers
Pride and vanity
Beards

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