| ||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
PreS-Gr 2-MacDonald's retelling of this Limba tale is engineered for storytime success. The silly mice in Mabela's village are hunted by one clever cat. Thankfully, Mabela is pretty clever herself compared to most of her peers. When the cat invites the mice to join her "secret Cat Society," they can hardly believe their luck. All they have to do is lead the cat into the forest, sing at the top of their lungs, and never look back. Because she is the smallest mouse, Mabela is the first in line. With every loud refrain, however, she notices substantial evidence that fewer and fewer mice seem to be singing and marching behind her. Remembering her wise father's advice for survival when she is "out and about," Mabela manages to save her friends and leave the treacherous cat tangled in thorns. MacDonald prefaces the story with brief background information about the oral tradition in Limba culture and suggests an original song and a game to encourage creative interaction. Coffey's thatch-strewn paintings, rendered in acrylic on watercolor paper textured with gesso, feature lots of visibly clueless, wide-eyed mice, and his cat oozes predatory shrewdness to the very end.
Catherine T. Quattlebaum, DeKalb County Public Library, Atlanta, GA
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
Product Details
Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images?
|
|
Share your thoughts with other customers:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A folktale for being aware and having common sense,
By Emily Hawkins "moreta2" (Indianapolis, Indiana, US) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mabela the Clever (Hardcover)
I enjoy storybooks adapted from oral storytelling. This story is from the Limba people in Sierra Leone, Africa. The illustrations are simplistic but not meant to be completely realistic. The mice are purple, green, yellow and gray. Mabella, being the main character mouse, is red. All of the mice have ping-pong ball eyes that give them a foolish appearance. She is different than the other mice because she pays attention to the advice her father's advice of listening, looking and paying attention to her surroundings. He also recommends fleeing quickly from bad situations. How will these lessons come into play when the mice meet a pleasant cat inviting them to join a secret cat society?
I really like the last line of the story, "Limba grandparents say, "If a person is clever, it is because someone has taught them their cleverness."
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
...,
By Ulyyf "Connie" (NYC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mabela the Clever (Paperback)
A good story with an unusual moral - at least, I've never heard "Pay attention and THINK about what you're saying!" presented as a moral before, although God knows it ought to be.
No mousies are harmed in the reading of this story. My only real concern with it is that I have no idea how authentic it is.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
She is not big. She is not strong. But she is very clever.,
By
This review is from: Mabela the Clever (Hardcover)
What does it mean to be clever? Does it mean that when you attend cocktail parties with a chosen circle of friends you're able to whip out a series of timely bon mots? Does it mean that you have the ability to finish every Sunday crossword puzzle that appears in the New York Times? Or does it, perhaps, mean that you use the full range of your brain at all times, thereby saving yourself from harm in the long run? My vote is for the last. And, as the delightful "Mabela the Clever" by Margaret Read MacDonald concurs, not much more need be said on the subject.
Says the book from the start, "In the early times, some were clever and some were foolish. The Cat was one of the clever ones. The mice were mostly foolish". Mostly. There are exceptions to every rule and in this case the exception is named Mabela. Mabela comes from a loving family, one that has given her much good advice in the past. Says her father to her, one should always keep their ears open to listen, their eyes open to see, pay attention to everything you say, and "if you have to move, MOVE FAST!". A sweet little red mouse, Mabela finds use for this parcel of wisdom when a large charming orange pussycat persuades the mice to learn all the secrets of the cat. To do so, they need only walk in a line with the cat in the rear, singing, "When we are marching, we never look back! The cat is at the end! Fo Feng! Fo Feng!". It's Mabela who realizes, at the front of this line, that something is amiss. Especially when the voices of the others behind her becomes softer.... and softer... Fear not, little children. Though I'm sure that the original folktale of this story had the cat eat every one of the foolish mousies, it does not do so here. Instead, the cat wears a red bag on its back, into which it scoops and drops each mouse that it hopes to eat later. Fortunately for all (except the cat) Mabela intercedes. In her Author's Note at the beginning of the book, acclaimed storyteller extraordinaire, Margaret Read MacDonald, explains that she adapted this tale from one found originally in Sierra Leone. People reading this book are encouraged to sing the marching song with initial gusto and then, as each mouse slips away, softer and softer. She even provides a tune, though she points out that it's perfectly copacetic to create a melody of your own. What I found especially endearing about this picture book were the illustrations by Tim Coffey. An artist who has only produced one or two books in his lifetime, he's given this tale just the right amount of whimsy to make it a classic. The mice may be foolish, but they're also lovable. Mabela, set apart from the others by deint of her berry red fur, sports a lovely little pair of buck teeth that make her especially adorable. And the cat is an excellent source of beautiful malice. It is a hunter and a charmer. You have no difficulty believing that the mice would follow this coy leader wherever it might ask them to go. The moral of this story is an excellent one for children. Don't act without thinking and always keep your wits about you. A lovely lesson for one and all. The final line in the book reads that, "If a person is clever, it is because someone has taught them their cleverness". In this case, Margaret Read MacDonald is that person. She, therefore, is the one to thank.
Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
|
|
Suggested Tags from Similar Products(What's this?)Be the first one to add a relevant tag (keyword that's strongly related to this product).
|
|
This product's forum
Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
|
Related forums
|