![]() ![]() PLB 0-7868-2125-6 As is true for Pam Conrad’s Tub People, the events in a matryoshka doll’s life depend on external manipulations and circumstances in this case, it makes the story of a perilous journey fall somewhat flat. The story is just as stuffed, wordy beyond effect, and without personality the cautionary elements are thoroughly diluted, and the only suspense-in the encounter with the weasel-quickly dissipates. ![]() ![]() Leola is drawn with exacting realism, while the bears have the faces and demeanor of the stuffed toys won at a carnival. ![]() The artwork is a curious combination of the overly observed and caricature. They ask after her manners, which she admits she’s ignored her tears show her for the child she is, and the mother bear loads a basket and sends a contrite Leola home with an escort. Leola misbehaves, eating what she’s not supposed to, sits even though she hasn’t been invited, and is found by the three bears upon their return. She gets lost in the woods, is frightened by a weasel, and comes across the inn that the three bears run they’ve left the place while some baked goods cool, and so the story line joins the original. Rosales spins the story of the three bears with African-American elements Leola, in the Goldilocks role, runs off to do what she wants, in spite of her grandmother’s warning not to go astray. ![]()
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