Rapunzel

Rapunzel by Brothers Grimm, published by National Geographic Books in October 1997, is a beautifully illustrated edition that spans 48 pages. This retelling by Paul O. Zelinsky draws from both the original Grimms’ tale and earlier narratives, presenting a fresh perspective on the classic story. The illustrations are noted for their emotional depth and narrative strength, enhancing the timeless themes of possessiveness and separation.
In this edition, readers will find a unique interpretation that emphasizes the beauty of the tower and the complexities of the relationships between characters. Zelinsky’s artwork captures the essence of the story, portraying the dynamics between the mother figure and Rapunzel, as well as the journey toward self-reliance faced by the young couple. The book invites exploration of themes related to family and personal growth, making it a thoughtful addition to the genres of juvenile fiction and fairy tales.
Official synopsis Publisher
Surely among the most original and gifted of children’s book illustrators, Paul O. Zelinsky has once again with unmatched emotional authority, control of space, and narrativecapability brought forth a unique vision for an age-old tale. Few artists at work today can touch the level at which his paintings tell a story and exert their hold.
Zelinsky’s retelling of Rapunzel reaches back beyond the Grimms to a late-seventeenth-century French tale by Mlle. la Force, who based hers on the Neapolitan tale Petrosinella in a collection popular at the time. The artist understands the story’s fundamentals to be about possessiveness, confinement, and separation, rather than about punishment and deprivation. Thus the tower the sorceress gives Rapunzel here is not a desolate, barren structure of denial but one of esoteric beauty on the outside and physical luxury within. And the world the artist creates through the elements in his paintings the palette, control of light, landscape, characters, architecture,interiors, costumes speaks to us not of an ugly witch who cruelly imprisons a beautiful young girl, but of a mother figure who powerfully resists her child’s inevitable growth, and of a young woman and man who must struggle in the wilderness for the self-reliance that is the true beginningof their adulthood.
As ever, and yet always somehow in newly arresting fashion, Paul O. Zelinsky’s work thrillingly shows us the events of the story while guiding us beyond them to the truths that have made it endure.
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