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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Real Charmer!, August 30, 2003
By 
R. M. Fisher "Raye" (New Zealand = Middle Earth!) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: A Frog Prince (Paperback)
Everyone knows the story of the Frog Prince, and the idea of "kissing a frog to make a prince" is a well-loved verse around the world. But did you ever think that the spoilt Princess, who first broke her promise to the frog who rescued her ball and then threw him across the room in disgust before he changed into a prince was a little undeserving of her happily ever after? (Some versions of the story have the princess kissing the frog to change him back, but the throwing against the wall is the original and correct tale).

Alix Berenzy thought so, and resolved to retell and reillustrate the traditional tale from the frog's point of view. Sure enough, it starts on familiar territory: the Princess drops her golden ball into the pond and the frog retrieves it for her, on the condition that the Princess let him go with her into her palace and remain her companion. The ball is fetched, but the Princess regrets her decision to have the frog as a house guest, and only goes through with her promise on the instruction of her father.

But here is where the tale changes - hearing a riddle from the singing moon, the frog decides to go on a quest to find a *true* princess - one that will love him for his inner beauty. The king obliges, shamed by his daughter's ingratitude, and grants him royal clothes and a white pony. Following the sun by day and the moon by night, the frog begins his quest, traversing dangerous trolls, wicked witches, tangled woods and misty oceans to reach the End of the World and the Princess that awaits. Alix Berenzy creates a great twist in the tale by describing the beauty of the Princess in the castle, but making the reader turn the page to see her appearence on the following page - and that appearence is not what you'd expect!

The story is a lovely retelling of the traditional tale, undated somewhat for today's standards of teaching kids to look beyond a person's appearence to the soul within. This sentiment is the theme of the entire book, but with side plots of escapes and quests, Alix Berenzy thankfully does not jam it down our throats, and it is shared without overly dramatising it. The illustrations are of course stunning. As a children's illustrator Alix Berenzy is right up there with the masters: K. Y. Craft, Ruth Sanderson and Alan Lee - her paintings especially have a brightness and vividness to them that make them seem to leap out of the pages. She is a master at creating light - whether it be the light filtering through the woods, creating a path way of light, or the beautiful orange colours of the setting sun on the ocean as the frog prince crosses it on the back of a turtle. This is definitely a must have children's book, especially if you're a fan of the frog prince tale (try the Canon Movietale "The Frog Prince" starring Helen Hunt and Aileen Quinn) or moralistic stories of finding love below the surface (there are lots of similiarities here to the movie "Shrek" - even the colour green!) Highly recommended.

"Little green frog alone at night,
Beauty is in the beholder's sight.
Follow the sun, then follow me,
To lands beyond, across the sea.
In another kingdom you shall find,
A true princess, of a different mind."

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Gorgeous Original Fairy Tale, October 4, 2004
This review is from: A Frog Prince (Paperback)
Frankly, before I read this book to my daughter I was prepared not to like it. Hmmm, another preachy pansy-pants rewrite of a classic story to give it a moral with a capital M? However, I was pleasantly blown away by the lovely, luminous artwork -- and, even better, by the story. Far from just sanitizing the Frog Prince fable, Berenzy has managed to create an original story with all the horror and wonder of a great fairy tale. The scary parts are quite thrillingly SCARY, and the frog's quest is told in nicely poetic language. The illustrations are eye-popping and humorous by turns, and measure up to the likes of Kinuko Craft and Gennady Spirin.

I'm not going to throw out the original Frog Prince, bratty princess and all -- but this is a work certainly worthy to sit next to it on the bookshelf, and Berenzy's tale by no means suffers in comparison.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Oh Mommy, Read it Again!, October 20, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: A Frog Prince (Hardcover)
Is what our daughter exclaimed after we read her this book for the first time. The illustrations are Chris Van Allsburg (SP?) quality, the pace is just right for an attentive 3 to 4 year old. The frog keeps a steady moral high ground in both thought and deed while searching for the princess who is right for him. The end is quite a surprize, if only because of our preconceptions of the standard frog prince tale.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A Frog Prince, April 21, 2010
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This review is from: A Frog Prince (Paperback)
This beautifully illustrated book tells the "real" story of the Princess and the Frog and was a joy to read to my granddaughter
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4.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful Illustrations, Beautiful Wording, Mediocre Message, November 17, 2009
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: A Frog Prince (Paperback)
I've been collecting well-written and beautifully illustrated books for children since I was twelve. Impressed by the reviews and images of this book on Amazon, I had expectations that the ending would also be clever and thought provoking. In this respect I felt disappointed. The end was cute, heartwarming, but seemed to me a little cliché. The moral of the tale, "beauty is in the eye of the beholder," fell a little flat for me.

Nevertheless, Alix Berenzy, who both wrote and illustrated this telling of The Frog Prince, is an artistic word-weaver and illustrator. The oil painting illustrations in this book are delightfully imaginative and exquisite. Short of my personal disappointment in an overly explored theme of "just be yourself," I found nothing lacking in Alix Berenzy's storytelling abilities. I am glad I purchased the book. If you are looking for a more profound moral to the story, or if you are seeking a more traditional telling of the tale, I recommend Mercer Mayer's East of the Sun and West of the Moon.
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A Frog Prince
A Frog Prince by Alix Berenzy (Hardcover - November 15, 1989)
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