Rapunzel

by Jutta Ash

Hardcover, 1982

Status

Available

Call number

398.2/1/0943E

Collection

Publication

New York : Holt, Rinehart and Winston, c1982.

Description

A beautiful girl with long golden hair is imprisoned in a lonely tower by a witch.

User reviews

LibraryThing member AnnaMarieOkie
Rapunzel is the fairytale of a young girl that due to her parents' bargaining, lives in a dreadful tower owned by a witch. Rapunzel's sweet voice and kind spirit attracts a young prince who falls in love with her. Rapunzel's long hair makes it possible for them to meet. The climax of the story is
Show More
when the witch discovers that Rapunzel has fallen in love with the prince. One cannot help but be moved by the reuniting of the prince and Rapunzel in the end.

For this version of Rapunzel, I have seen much better. I was very disturbed that the book encouraged premarital sex. The illustrations were nicely done. The storyline was not.

For extending this book, I would not. I would use another a version of the story. I would then tie that story into a lesson on hygiene in conjunction with Rapunzel's hair. Or perhaps a lesson on eating healthy since Rapunzel's mother ate salads to make her well.
Show Less
LibraryThing member we3zmom
Summary:
Rapunzel is a story of a man and his wife who wanted a child more than almost anything when the man stole a green lettuce known as rapunzel. The woman was tempted by the lettuce, and became ill because she wouldn't eat anything else. The man attempted to steal some from the witches garden,
Show More
but was caught and in exchange for the rapunzel, he promised the witch his first born child. Soon after, his wife becomes pregnant, and he has to honor his promise to the witch. The witch hid the girl in a tower, and used her long hair to scale the wall to enter the chamber where the girl lived. A young prince heard the witch call for Rapunzel to let down her hair. He visited rapunzel several times until caught by the witch.

Personal reaction:
I enjoyed the story of rapunzel, however, it is a little long to use as a read aloud unless it is for older children.

classroom extension ideas:
I could have my classroom do their own rendition of Rapunzel by dressing up as the characters do and perform the story.

I could have the class draw a picture of the theme of the story.
Show Less
LibraryThing member AbigailAdams26
One of the most popular of the classic European fairy-tales, Rapunzel is a story that has been adapted and illustrated countless times. Many children's book devotees will be familiar with Paul Zelinksy's gorgeous Calecott Medal-winning version, which places the tale in an Italian Renaissance
Show More
setting. Alix Berenzy, on the other hand, locates her adaptation in a more medieval landscape, while Dorothee Duntze creates a rather stylized "Europe" in her edition. My favorite retelling, of course, has always been Diane Stanley's Petrosinella, which reproduces the Neopolitan variant of the tale.

But whatever version we may prefer, it's always fun to come across a different interpretation, and so I picked up Jutta Ash's retelling of this classic Brothers Grimm märchen with some interest. The narrative itself was rather uneven, but the artwork was quite engrossing, and it was fascinating to see that Ash had given the tale a somewhat eastern flavor. The mosaics and drapery in Rapunzel's tower looked Byzantine, a visual impression accentuated by the hanging lamp found in one scene, and the stylized manner in which she depicted the human and animal figures.

I can't say that I found this a particularly impressive retelling, overall, but I did think that the artist's choices were unique, and that some of her two-page spreads, in particular, were quite charming. Not a version I'd recommend expending a great deal of effort to find, it is nevertheless of some interest to those - like me - who like to compare and contrast the various adaptations of a tale available.
Show Less

Language

Physical description

24 cm

ISBN

0030612195 / 9780030612190
Page: 0.1229 seconds