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From School Library Journal K-Gr 3-An old woman and her donkey come to the marketplace of a prosperous city. She unpacks 12 ancient books said to contain all the wisdom in the world and offers them for sale to the mayor. He isn't interested, but he later dreams about another city buying half of the volumes. The following year, the old woman offers the remaining texts, but again the mayor turns her down and has a similar dream. In the end, there is only one book left, and the city has fallen on hard times. The mayor buys it, then becomes a pilgrim in search of the other city, "-so that we can learn to live like its people." This preachy tale falls flat, and its heavy-handed message may confuse children. While the prosperity of one city, whose only crime seems to be that of complacency, foreshadows its doom, the city that purchases the old woman's wisdom is rewarded with-prosperity. Just in case readers don't get it (and they probably won't), the message is spelled out in an overlong publisher's note. Dexter's jewel-toned, mosaiclike watercolors are attractive but cluttered, a look that is not enhanced by the Bradley Hand typeface. It's wise to pass on this one.-Donna L. Scanlon, Lancaster County Library, PA Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information, Inc. Read more
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KEEPER OF WISDOM
Set in a faraway land that looks Arabian by the architecture, a town learns a lesson about the value of wisdom. A wise old woman travels to their town to sell them 12 wisdom books containing all of the knowledge of the world, but they decline. "We have everything money can buy." So, the woman sells her wisdom to others. But the town soon learns that wealth is ephemeral and money cannot keep the world from changing. Famine hits the country, and the mayor regrets his mistake of not investing in wisdom. The wise woman returns and sells the mayor her last book of wisdom. He then goes on a quest to the city that acquired the other 11 books of wisdom in order to learn to live wisely. The illustrations give it a dreamlike quality, and the tale may be a springboard for reflection on material values.
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