PreS-Gr 2—What can another version of this classic fable possibly add to the canon? When it is created by Buitrago and Yockteng, the answer is quite a bit. From the first characterizations, readers understand that this is not their grandmother's Aesop. The lion is described as "lovely…like a sun," while the mouse is "a busybody and a glutton." The vocabulary is colorful, the styling smart, reminiscent of William Steig. When the mouse overreaches in their first encounter, the lion dismisses him. The omniscient narrator explains: "'nsignificant' means being of no use or importance and is the most insulting thing you could say about a mouse." Yockteng's soft compositions are rendered in pencil and colored digitally with a subdued woodland palette of greens, browns, grays, copper, and gold. Humor and drama unfold with restraint: a single claw pressed on the tip of the tail had trapped the intruder. After the lion is ensnared by a hunter's net and freed by the mouse, the plot diverges from the original. Rain compels the lion to shelter the rodent with his paw. Fearing a never-ending cycle of favors, the mouse expresses concern, but the beast's motivation is genuine, and "that is how they began to be good to each other." Never heavy-handed, the levity expands with the friendship, as when the lion's hairy tail is draped over the mouse, creating a hilarious miniature doppelgänger, roaring at an insect. 
              We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing
Be the first reader to comment.
Comment Policy:
Comment should not be empty !!!