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  • The Korean Cinderella

The Korean Cinderella

Author
Illustrator
Ruth Heller
Publication Date
January 18, 1996
Genre / Grade Band
Fiction /  2nd − 3rd
Language
English
The Korean Cinderella

Currently out of stock
Description

This is an enchanting and magical variant of the favorite fairy tale.

Like the tree planted to honor her birth, Pear Blossom is beautiful, and the pride of her elderly mother and father. But then her mother dies, and her father remarries. Pear Blossom's stepmother resents her new daughter's beauty. 

Out of jealousy, she makes Pear Blossom perform impossible chores while her own daughter, Peony, watches idly. But fortunately, Pear Blossom is not alone. With the help of magical creatures--togkabis--she can accomplish each task, and triumph over her stepmother's cruelty.

Notable Children's Trade Book in the Field of Social Studies (NCSS/CBC)

Publication date
January 18, 1996
Genre
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780064433976
Lexile Measure
700
Publisher
HarperCollins
BISAC categories
JUV012020 - Juvenile Fiction | Fairy Tales & Folklore | Country & Ethnic - General
Library of Congress categories
Folklore
Fairy tales
Korea

ALA/Booklist

Climo includes an explanatory note about Cinderella variants (the Korean version in particular), and Heller explains the decorations, costumes, and settings she used in the illustrations. An agreeable retelling of the Cinderella story.

None

Ancient Korean patterns are carefully woven into the illustrations.

Publishers Weekly

Following The Egyptian Cinderella, Climo and Heller conflate several Korean variants of Cinderella to offer up the story of Pear Blossom, a lovely girl who is sorely mistreated by her nasty stepmother and stepsister. Climo's engaging reworking lends familiar thematic elements an Asian twist: the evil stepmother saddles Pear Blossom with such impossible tasks as picking up scattered grains of rice and weeding an enormous rice paddy; the girl's magical helpers include a tokgabi, or goblin; she loses one straw sandal on the way to the village festival. At once comfortingly familiar and intriguingly exotic, the text is especially noteworthy for its instructive but unobtrusive incorporation of Korean words. Heller's illustrations, based on extensive research of Korean art, are filled with images of enchanted animals, traditional costumes and, of course, pear blossoms. Lavish geometric borders combine intense greens, oranges and purples; the spreads, while making use of Western perspectives, retain a busy, Asian sense of pattern. Endnotes by both author and illustrator amplify the cultural context. Ages 4-8. 

Copyright 1993 Publisher’s Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

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