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CM . . . .
Volume IV Number 2 . . . . September 19, 1997
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The Peacock's Pride.
Melissa Kajpust. Illustrated by Jo'Anne Kelly.
Winnipeg, MB: Hyperion Press, 1996.
Unpaged, board, $19.95.
ISBN 1-895340-12-8.
Subject Headings:
Legends-India-Juvenile literature.
Peafowl-Folklore-Juvenile literature.
Preschool - grade 4 / Ages 4 - 9.
Review by Dave Jenkinson.
**** /4
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excerpt:
One day, long ago, Peacock strutted through the forest with his
royal blue crown held high. In the flickering light, his long
back feathers created a magnificent blue-green fan that shimmered
like sapphires and emeralds. He stopped beneath a banyan tree
that grew near a water hole and turned his heavy plumage slowly,
hoping to attract the admiration of a group of birds sitting on
the branches above him. But the birds had more immediate
concerns.
In this Indian pourquoi tale, when a viper continues to linger
near the area's only water hole, the jungle birds face a dilemma:
dying from dehydration or from being eaten by the treacherous
snake. Vain Peacock tells the birds that his "hypnotic beauty
will easily defeat" the snake for "my fan has a thousand eyes
that will stare Old Viper into a trance. I'll then seize him by
the neck and kill him." Peacock's actions will carry a price,
however: "If I succeed, everyone must acknowledge me king of the
water hole." Despite some misgivings, the birds agree, and
Peacock dispatches the snake as promised. In the weeks that
follow, the King of the Water Hole becomes increasingly imperious
in his demands. Finally the birds decide that they must rid
themselves of him. A Koel, a timid, plain black bird, challenges
Peacock, saying, "Would you agree...to give up your kingdom if I
can prove that my beauty is every bit as great as yours?" Seeing
the drab bird before him, Peacock readily agrees. When Koel
begins to pour forth a remarkable song, an impressed Peacock
admits "that it is as beautiful as my feathers," but he still
believes that his own "song will be every bit as beautiful."
Unable to produce anything more than a discordant two-note
shriek, a chastened Peacock must acknowledge he has been bested,
"and that is how Peacock came to drag his train of feathers
behind him, no longer blinded with pride."
Kelly's watercolour and gouache illustrations fill the pages with
an abundance of colour and capture the lushness of India's
forests. A concluding "Author's Note" provides useful background
information for adults and older child readers. This well written story, with its "pride-goes-before-a-fall"
moral, is a most worthwhile addition to the folklore shelves.
Highly recommended.
Dave Jenkinson teaches children's and adolescent literature
courses at the Faculty of Education, University of Manitoba.
To comment on this title or this review, send mail to cm@umanitoba.ca.
Copyright © 1997 the Manitoba Library Association.
Reproduction for personal use is permitted only if this copyright notice
is maintained. Any other reproduction is prohibited without
permission.
Published by
The Manitoba Library Association
ISSN 1201-9364
TABLE OF CONTENTS FOR THIS ISSUE - September 19, 1997.
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