Quill Soup A Stone Soup StoryBy: Alan Durant/ Illustrated by: Dale BlankenaarIf only I had something more . . . Weary traveler Noko the porcupine asks Meerkat, Monkey, Pangolin, and all the other villagers for shelter and a meal, and each one refuses. So,
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Quill Soup
A Stone Soup Story
By: Alan Durant/ Illustrated by: Dale Blankenaar
Weary traveler Noko the porcupine asks Meerkat, Monkey, Pangolin, and all the other villagers for shelter and a meal, and each one refuses. So, putting his wits to work, Noko asks for a fire and a pot of water. He adds some of his quills to the pot and proudly tells onlookers that he’s making his famous quill soup-a dish fit for the king! Now if only he had a little something extra to add . . . One by one, the villagers each contribute an ingredient to a dish that all can share.
Lushly textured illustrations bring this take on the Stone Soup fable to vivid life.
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Alan Durant, author
Alan Durant writes fiction for all ages, from preschool prose to poetry for adults. His picture books include Burger Boy. Alan lives in Brighton, England.
Read more about Alan.
Dale Blankenaar, illustrator
Dale Blankenaar has illustrated about thirty picture books and won several international awards, including the IBBY Honour list and the Publishers Choice Award at the 201 7 Shanghai International Book Fair. Dale lives in South Africa.
Read more about Dale.
Kirkus Reviews
From South African, an animal retelling of the Stone Soup folktale. The stranger in this version is Noko, a porcupine. Having traveled without food through the Valley of a Thousand Hills, he arrives in a village hungry. When the villagers refuse him food, he creates a thick and rich soup with nothing but hot water and three of his own quillsand, of course, all the other ingredients that the villagers contribute. Impressed by Nokos claim to have fed this soup to the king, they fork over carrots, mealies, beans, spinach, and more. The king, not present but imagined, is a lion; the villagers are Meerkat, Warthog, Rabbit, and bunches of others. The setting, called a village, is both bustling and ambiguousan amalgam of village, forest, and jungle. The scenes are intensely crowded and bursting with energy; both animals and backgrounds are styled in two dimensions, so everything overlaps on one plane. These animals arent living in a specific static location so much as a world of bright red, yellow, blue, green, black, and white shapes and patterns. Occasionally an element seems industrial, such as small rounded rooms connected by ladders and tunnels that evoke factory pipes, but its not definite. Flap copy says that illustrator Blankenaar took inspiration from African sources ranging from broad to specific: Tanzanian artwork, the wood sculpture of Western Africa, and the costumes and masks of the Bwa people of Burkina Faso. Visually dynamic.
Publishers Weekly
Durants appealing twist on Stone Soup follows the adventures of Noko, a porcupine, who comes to a village after traveling through the Valley of a Thousand Hills. Upon arrival, he is delightedat last, somewhere to rest, and something to eat. The suspicious local animals hide and refuse to give him food, but Nokos brain was as sharp as the quills on his back. When he starts to cook a quill soup and claims that it is beloved by the king, the other animals, impressed, join inMeerkat finds mealies and Pangolin adds wormsto make it just the way His Majesty likes it, and soon enough, there is soup enough for all to share. The books greatest appeal is Blankenaars vibrant, layered illustrations, which use stylized, blocky shapes and bold shades of red, blue, yellow, green, and black to conjure the bustling biodiversity of South African wild places.
The Horn Book
This retelling of the traditional “Stone Soup” tale stars a porcupine named Noko, hungry, tired, and seeking hospitality in a small village; and features animals of South Africamonkeys, meerkats, aardvarks, and warthogs, who refuse to share their obvious plenty. Noko plucks three of his quills and sets about making soup, “just how His Majesty likes it.” The text is engagine and readable (“his brain wasa as sharp as the quills on his back”), albeit with few of the structural hallmarks of an oral tale (and no source note). It is South African artist Blankenaar’s imagery that pulls readers into the story. Stylized shpes in strong colors spill off every page. The illustrations, with the texture of block prints, are bold and flat. The animal homes, seen in a cutaway side view, are an intriguing jumble of natural and human-made elements for instance, rabbits live underground in warrens but use electirc light fixtures and ladders). Opening endpapers in black, white, and shades of gray, wet the stage for Noli’s hnger and isolation. The book closes with colorful endpapers when “with a full tummy and a happy heart, Noko the traveler went to sleep at last.” Birds, snakes, three branches, and animals’ tails twine together, creating an interconnected world in which animals will eventuallyeven if they have to be trickedaccept a needy stranger into their community.
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Hardcover
ISBN: 978-1-62354-147-7
E-book
ISBN: 978-1-63289-923-1 EPUB
Ages: 3-7
Page count: 40
91/2 x 101/2
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