A children’s picture book of poems about fairies and other magical beings.
Debut children’s author Fraser winningly introduces young readers to flitting fairies, elves, leprechauns, a cartoon-loving goblin, a dragon, a unicorn named Shakespeare, and more. These magical beings exist, for the most part, in a world of woods, wildflowers, animals, and insects reminiscent of Cicely Mary Barker’s Flower Fairies books. Watercolorist Vasileva’s delicate illustrations are variously sized and positioned around the poems, and fairy and human characters are pictured as Black, brown, and White. Fraser’s verses, written primarily as simple couplets and quatrains, beg to be read aloud (“I love to watch the faeries fly above the pine and yew. / I love to watch them Highland fling above midsummer’s dew”). The poetry paints evocative images; for example, a child imagines what it would be like to ride on a butterfly and play “among the cowslip and bluebells” (“To Be a Faery Child”). The shortest entry, “The Goblin,” tells an amusing story in 10 lines; funny-bone humor also infuses “Little Bubbles,” about a fire-breathing baby dragon who lives with a boy named Bobby-Joe, drives a go-kart, cooks burgers, and becomes overly excited playing ball, accidentally singeing the boy’s hair.
Expressive, gentle verses for young fans of fairy tales.