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Overview
Princess Bess has loads of clothes
made with satin, snaps, and bows.
And she changes them all day,
for her lessons and ballet.
But if a certain truth be told,
her favorite clothes are much less bold.
She carefully keeps them out of sight
until it's time for bed at night.
Then in her room without a care,
she plays in what she loves to wear.
Synopsis
Princess Bess has loads of clothes
made with satin, snaps, and bows.
And she changes them all day,
for her lessons and ballet.
But if a certain truth be told,
her favorite clothes are much less bold.
She carefully keeps them out of sight
until it's time for bed at night.
Then in her room without a care,
she plays in what she loves to wear.
Publishers Weekly
From the glitter on the jacket and Barbie-pink endpapers to the catchy rhymed descriptions of Princess Bess's "loads of" beautiful clothes, Cuyler's (100th Day Worries) sprightly story brims over with little-girl appeal. Princess Bess, depicted in debut artist Maione's zesty ink-and-watercolor art with carrot-colored ringlets and apple-red cheeks, leads a busy life (together with her omnipresent puppy, whose doings add an extra note of humor). Every activity of Bess's day, from ballet lessons to art class to jousting and chess, demands a different outfit. Even mealtimes require a costume change: "for luncheon with the prince/ she wore pink pantaloons of chintz," writes Cuyler; Maione shows her lounging barefoot in a treetop with an equally casually clad boy prince as a footman on a ladder holds a tray. But only when she has "closed her curtains, locked her door, dropped her dress upon the floor" is Bess finally free to dress as she likes-in her underclothes. The well-crafted rhymes roll easily off the tongue; Maione's droll pictures, balancing fashion-loving detail with Bess's brio, are a skillful accompaniment. Ages 4-8. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Editorials
Publishers Weekly
From the glitter on the jacket and Barbie-pink endpapers to the catchy rhymed descriptions of Princess Bess's "loads of" beautiful clothes, Cuyler's (100th Day Worries) sprightly story brims over with little-girl appeal. Princess Bess, depicted in debut artist Maione's zesty ink-and-watercolor art with carrot-colored ringlets and apple-red cheeks, leads a busy life (together with her omnipresent puppy, whose doings add an extra note of humor). Every activity of Bess's day, from ballet lessons to art class to jousting and chess, demands a different outfit. Even mealtimes require a costume change: "for luncheon with the prince/ she wore pink pantaloons of chintz," writes Cuyler; Maione shows her lounging barefoot in a treetop with an equally casually clad boy prince as a footman on a ladder holds a tray. But only when she has "closed her curtains, locked her door, dropped her dress upon the floor" is Bess finally free to dress as she likes-in her underclothes. The well-crafted rhymes roll easily off the tongue; Maione's droll pictures, balancing fashion-loving detail with Bess's brio, are a skillful accompaniment. Ages 4-8. (Feb.)
Copyright Β© Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.