cover image Prince Bear

Prince Bear

Helme Heine, Helen Heine. Margaret K. McElderry Books, $14.95 (31pp) ISBN 978-0-689-50484-6

This droll, expertly orchestrated book might be termed an anti-fairy tale, in which Heine ( One Day in Paradise ) gleefully confutes the logic of legend. His fable tells of bears, who could once turn into princesses by kissing them, and princesses, who--if ``bored with living in a castle and always being sweet and good''--could easily become bears by galloping into the forest on horseback. But civilization and bureaucracy interfere with these charmed lives: trees are felled and roads built, bears are obliged to apply for licenses to hunt or fish, and princesses, overwhelmed with requests, refuse to receive any more kisses. A standoff between placard-brandishing bear protesters and princesses by now afraid to leave their castles results in a stalemate, frustrating all concerned. Heine's winsome, spirited watercolors are full of mood and motion, sweetly sending up the foibles of human politics. Ages 4-8. (Sept.)