No. Wrong.

No. You can't leave it like that. You can't let readers think that she actually did get the wish.
No. Wrong.
No. You can't leave it like that. You can't let readers think that she actually did get the wish.
Gets sinister at the end.
Wow. I was not expecting the dark turn at the end.
Prance, prance, I'm the Lord of the Forest!
Maybe the king needs to be taught a lesson, but The Lord of the Forest just gets to do whatever he wants because he's magical.
Japan's version of the fairy realm.
The framing device for the story basically lampshades the fact that the story has a weird ending, which is even weirder.
Too-long Russian fable about the handsome guy getting the girl.
I guess it's saved from being a bad book to read to kids by virtue of not really being a book to read to kids.
As bland as the snow.
Very repetitive. I certainly couldn't read this to my kid because it would drive me crazy.
Feelgood story where hard work pays off.
There's no deus ex machina, contrived kind of stuff here like many children's books have, which is great.
Toddlers don't need to see their failures depicted in a book.
It's a little bit silly, but not really all that funny.
Forced, annoying rhymes and not much of a story.
Perhaps the diction is intentionally childlike? But no, then they wouldn't have used the word “congregate.”
Almost good.
If it had some better illustrations, this one might actually be good.