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Bagram Ibatoulline‘s Thumbelina

door Hans Christian Andersen, Brian Alderson (Adaptation)

Andere auteurs: Bagram Ibatoulline (Illustrator)

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A tiny girl no bigger than a thumb is stolen by a great ugly toad and subsequently has many adventures and makes many animal friends, before finding the perfect mate in a warm and beautiful southern land.
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Thumbelina gets a dose of animal husbandry. Snicker. ( )
  morbusiff | Sep 20, 2018 |
Written in 1835, this is one of Hans Christian Andersen's first fairytales. While today the title is Thumbelina, throughout the years, the name changed from Tommelise, Little Ellie, and Little Totty.

This was also the first tale wherein Anderson used an animal/bird as a rescuing force.

The story starts with the swallow who tells the story of a woman who longed for a child. Visiting a local witch, she was given a few seeds of barleycorn. When a bud broke forth in the soil, one tight bud unfolded. And, as it opened the teeny, tiny wonderously formed little girl appeared. She was no bigger than a thumb.

Throughout the tale, Thumbelina experiences many adventures and comes upon those, very unlike her, who want to claim and marry her. First a toad looks in the open window and kidnaps Thumbelina, taking her to live on a lilly pad.
It is the river fish who hears her cries and rubbed the lillypad stalk until it broke.

Another creature, this time a beautiful butterfly landed on her lillypad and, taking her dress sash and roping it gently around the butterfly, she is carried down stream. Followed now by nasgy looking may bugs who flew her away, talking her to their home wherein she is deemed two footed ugly and skinny. Too ugly to keep, they dump her on a daisy.

Winter occurs and dejected and cold, she is rescued by a fieldmouse who captures her and makes her keep his abode clean while reading stories to him. He then set-up a visit with an old mole like creature who vows to marry her and keep her in the dark underground.

As they walk through his underground tunnels, they come upon a sparrow, presumed dead. Thumbelina rescues the sparrow from death by keeping it warm with a blanket. On her wedding day, the sparrow flew up through a hole in the ground taking her away as they flew high above the ground, soaring in the air.

In the end, the sparrow gently drops her with the Crystal Fairies who live where she once dwelt. Each flower contains a male and female fairy. The bud she landed upon contained the Crystal King. They married, and each year the sparrow returns to watch over her.

Once again, Bagram Ibatoulline provides detailed, beautiful illustrations that make the story come to life. ( )
  Whisper1 | Sep 4, 2016 |
The beautiful illustrations added to this well known tale of a thumb-sized girl who faced many dangers from frogs, may bugs, and a mole and manages to save a weak sparrow and ultimately herself, as well. ( )
  jmillerlits | Jul 3, 2016 |
This story is a classic. I enjoyed reading this picture book since the illustrations were small and in black in white as an aid to the words. The language was descriptive and powerful. This classic story is about a little girl born from a flower. She is grown by a local farmers wife and goes on many adventures. This stories language makes the story come to life with descriptive words, given the fact that it is of the traditional fantasy genre. “..But the petals were tightly closed as if it were still only a bud,” is an example of this descriptive language that explains the flower Thumbelina was born from. Given the descriptive language seeing black and white, small illustrations help to remind the reader of the oral origins of this story. The main idea of this story is to be thankful of what you have. Just because Thumbelina was tiny the family still loved her just the same. ( )
  MelynnReadmond | Nov 17, 2014 |
Thumbelina, illustrated by Bagram Ibatoulline.

Brian Alderson, the British children's author and critic, whose many folkloric projects have included the editing of Andrew Lang's color fairy books, as well as a collection of Hans Christian Andersen's tales (The Swan's Stories), here turns his attention to the classic story of a tiny girl, no bigger than a thumb. The trials and tribulations of Thumbelina (Tommelise in the original Danish) - kidnapped by toads, set adrift on a river, seized by maybugs, almost forced to marry a pompous old mole - are all here, as is the appropriately happy ending.

Although my loyalties lie with other Thumbelinas, I was pleased to see this new edition, with lovely gouache and watercolor illustrations by Bagram Ibatoulline, whose artwork has graced books such as Kate DiCamillo's The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane. His Thumbelina can look quite put out, as in the scene in which she is surrounded by the maybugs, or startled and alarmed, and her expressive little face adds great interest to this retelling. This is definitely one that fairy-tale fans - particularly those interested in Andersen - will want to examine! ( )
  AbigailAdams26 | Jul 19, 2013 |
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» Andere auteurs toevoegen (2 mogelijk)

AuteursnaamRolType auteurWerk?Status
Hans Christian Andersenprimaire auteuralle editiesberekend
Alderson, BrianAdaptationprimaire auteuralle editiesbevestigd
Ibatoulline, BagramIllustratorSecundaire auteuralle editiesbevestigd
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A tiny girl no bigger than a thumb is stolen by a great ugly toad and subsequently has many adventures and makes many animal friends, before finding the perfect mate in a warm and beautiful southern land.

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