Abigail
7,552 reviews233 followers
Picture-book author Eric A. Kimmel teams up with illustrator Megan Lloyd in this retelling of the traditional Russian tale of Baba Yaga and the Little Girl. The daughter of a widowed merchant, Marina was kindhearted and beautiful, save for the horn growing on her forehead. When her stepmother, taking advantage of the merchant's absence, sent her to the witch Baba Yaga for a needle and some thread, Marina was saved by her own kindness, managing to have her horn removed and to escape the witch's soup pot. Her stepsister Marusia was not so kind, and far less fortunate...Baba Yaga: A Russian Folktale is the thirty-fourth picture-book that I have read from the prolific Kimmel, and I found the narrative itself quite engaging. This is the same story, in slightly different form, as that told in Joanna Cole and Dirk Zimmer's Bony-Legs. Unfortunately, although I did appreciate the story, and found the accompanying illustrations from Megan Lloyd appealing enough, in their own right, I thought that text and image were significantly mismatched, and it detracted from my enjoyment. I have encountered Lloyd's work elsewhere - in Linda Williams' The Little Old Lady Who Was Not Afraid of Anything and Too Many Pumpkins, and in Kimmel's The Gingerbread Man - and have always found it pleasant, in a cute, cartoon-like way. But her style simply isn't suitable for a story about that fearsome witch, Baba Yaga. The threatening tone and creepy atmosphere of the story don't match at all with the cute, but fairly bland artwork, nor is there any sense, visually speaking, that this is a Russian story. The scene in which Baba Yaga pursues Marina shows the witch flying on a broomstick, holding a small pestle, when traditionally she rides in a massive mortar, steered by a similarly massive pestle. Although I am always happy to read different retellings of traditional tales, in the end this one wasn't a success. I'd recommend that readers looking for Baba Yaga stories try something like Marianna Mayer and Kinuko Craft's
- folklore-mythology folklore-russian picture-books
We've recently discovered the various Baba Yaga stories available from our local library system and we've read several so far, including Baba Yaga: A Russian Folktale, Babushka Baba Yaga, Baba Yaga and the Wise Doll, Marushka's Egg, and Baba Yaga and Vasilisa the Brave. This is an interesting tale that shows a young girl surviving Baba Yaga's impossible challenges with the help of a cat, dog, gate and tree. By showing some kindness, she is helped to evade the evil witch. We read a similar version of the story, Bony-legs by Joanna Cole and they were both entertaining and fun to read aloud. We enjoyed reading this story together and will look for more of these entertaining Russian tales at our local library.
- 2012 childrens pets
Shawn Thrasher
1,945 reviews46 followers
Readable (especially read-aloudable) re-telling of a Baba Yaga tale, with shades of Cinderella. The moral of the story - which is the moral of most folktales - is be kind to others, particularly strangers, because you never know when that kindness is going to come back to help you (or an ill word is going to come back to haunt you). My only complaint with the story is that I always imagined Baba Yaga to be far more cunning and frightening; perhaps this version has a sanitized version of Baba Yaga suitable for kiddos.
Bruce Nordstrom
190 reviews3 followers
I was a bit disappointed with this book. I read it aloud to my kids, and they loved it...especially the pictures. I read it again for myself, and was disappointed. Baba Yaga of Russian folktales is the Wicked Witch of the West, rolled in with the Evil Stepmother, and the Big Bad Wolf. In this telling, old Baba Yaga is just a vague, slightly weird old woman, with iron teeth. Lacks any of the really broody, sinister feeling that makes folktales so much fun.
- children fantasy
Valerie
1,211 reviews20 followers
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August 1, 2012This is not the edition I read. I got the Baba Yaga Tales from an old magazine called Children's Digest. I can't speak to the quality of this edition, but if it has pictures of Baba Yaga's house turning on its chicken legs, and of Baba Yaga flying through the air in her mortar and pestle, it can't really fail, can it? And if it doesn't, it will disappoint.