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CM . . . .
Volume VI Number 9 . . . . January 7 , 2000
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Ooo-cha!
Colleen Sydor. Illustrated by Ruth Ohi.
Toronto, ON: Annick Press, 1999.
32 pp., pbk. & cloth, $7.95 (pbk.), $17.95 (cl.).
ISBN 1-55037-604-7 (pbk.), ISBN 1-55037-605-5 (cl.).
Grades Preschool-2 / Ages 4-7.
Review by Liz Greenaway.
*** /4
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excerpt:
"Young lady!" roared the tiger, "my nose tells me that you have in your
basket a seven-layer chocolate cake with triple fudge icing. Seven-layer chocolate cake with
triple fudge icing is my favorite, and if you don't hand it over, there will be trouble!"
"Why should I give you my Great Granny Fanny's chocolate cake?" asked Emily.
"Because, " said the tiger, "I have teeth as big as daggers and claws as
sharp as razors, and that should be reason enough!"
"You may have teeth as big as daggers and claws as sharp as razors," said
Emily, "but you certainly don't have any manners, so you can have this instead." And she
thunked the tiger over the head with her good witch wand and said the magic word, "Ooo-cha!"
Instantly the tiger vanished, and in her place stood a beautiful tiger lily. Emily plucked the
tiger lily and off she skipped, whistling and singing, and smelling her lovely flower.
A send up of the classic "Little Red Riding Hood" story, Ooo-cha! turns a
familiar theme on its
head and still manages to seem fresh. Emily, a fearless young girl, is sent
to Great Granny Fanny's
house with a basket of goodies. Before Emily goes, her mother advises her
to "always remember
your table manners, and whatever you do, don't forget the magic word."
Along the way, Emily
meets all sorts of fierce beasts who demand her basket of goodies. However,
their lack of manners
leads Emily to use her magic wand nonchalantly - with the magic word
"Ooo-cha!" - and turn
them into a bouquet of wild flowers, which includes a tiger lily, a
snapdragon and a bullrush, that
she then takes with her to Great Granny's house. Emily also meets a frog,
whom she kisses and
transforms back into a Dragon Slayer, giving her an opportunity to release
the dragon she's just
"captured", thereby providing a livelihood for the out-of-work Dragon Slayer.
Once at Great Granny Fanny's, Emily discovers that the Three Little Pigs
have tied up Granny and
also covet Emily's treats. The pigs are easily taken care of when Emily
simply reverses her spell
("Aaa-choo") and releases her bouquet of wild beasts on the pigs.
The tone is light hearted and fun. Anyone who cheered the Paper Bag
Princess in Robert
Munsch's classic spoof will champion Emily's triumph over the wild beasts
she encounters, as
well as the ease and self-reliance she exudes in doing so. Ruth Ohi's
illustrations are stunning. Her
watercolor, goache and pen and ink illustrations vividly capture the
decorative style of fairy tale
art of old, right down to the ornate borders that frame each page. While
Ohi's work is slightly
more stylized here in her twenty-seventh book, there is the same attention
to detail. I love the
expressions on the beasts' faces, as well as the fact that Emily's house
looks like mine, right down
to the toddler in the high chair with pasta in her hair.
All in all, Ooo-cha! is good fun, and an excellent choice for reading aloud.
Recommended.
Liz Greenaway is a former bookseller living in Edmonton, AB.
To comment on this title or this review, send mail to cm@umanitoba.ca.
Copyright © 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 - January 7, 2000.
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