An ebullient collaboration between the fine historian whose many books include Where Do You Think You're Going, Christopher Columbus? (1981) and one of America's favorite illustrators. Fritz provides a brief, fact-filled text, printed on both sides of a jacket-style flap hinged at the right of each spread, and so amusingly perky that it holds its own even in the presence of the extraordinary pop-up illustrations. DePaola's art, in sumptuous colors—the Spanish court's royal reds and purples, the Caribbean's deep turquoise and greens, and imagination's lustrous gold, spilling into the background for the text—is truly handsome; set off by the elaborate three-dimensional paper engineering, it's a delight. As a dividend, there's a flap or pull tab to be found on almost every spread. Columbus's darker side is omitted (after all, this is a picture book); on the other hand, his accomplishments are not exaggerated with mock heroics. A winner. (Biography/Picture book. 5-9)