THE TWINS AND THE
BIRD OF DARKNESS:
A Hero Tale from the Caribbean
by Robert D. San Souci
Illustrated by Terry
Widener
Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
[ages 5-10]
Hardcover, Picture Book Fiction
ISBN: 0-689-83343-1
$16.99 USA
40 pages
Full-color illustrations
When the Bird of Darkness kidnaps Princess Marie, twin brothers Soliday, who is brave and kind, and Salacota, who is cowardly, set off to fight the beast and rescue the princess.
"San Souci (Cendrillon) returns to a Caribbean setting for this composite tale relayed in lush jungle colors and featuring a macabre multiheaded monster. When the baleful Bird of Darkness, its seven eagle-like heads on serpentine necks, claims an island princess for its own, twin brothers set out to save her. But the twins are opposite in nature: Soliday (who, like the biblical Joseph, wears a coat of many colors) is altruistic and hardworking, while lazy, conniving Salacota happily betrays his own brother. Widener's (If the Shoe Fits; Forecasts, May 6) stylized perspectives heighten the sinister aspects of the plot, but his vivid acrylics create a subtle, disquieting tension that intensifies the story's suspense. In characteristically striking juxtaposition, a tangerine sky is visible outside a sorcerer's shadowy but, contrasting with the dark skull and crossbones hanging just inside. Color figures prominently in the layout as well with warm hues backing lengthy blocks of text. The plot moves swiftly through treachery and triumph, but is not without its grisly moments, as when the bird issues a gruesome greeting to Soliday: 'I'll strike the bargain I struck with the others:/You give me your eyes and liver,/I'll give you swift death in return.' This well-wrought tale will best suit those who like their happily-ever-afters preceded by a good case of the shivers. Ages 5-10. (Sept.)" -- Publishers Weekly
"A foregone conclusion doesn't make the story any less interesting -- and readers certainly don't need to be twins to enjoy it. Terry Windener's lush illustrations beautifully depict the island paradise, the terrible bird and the happy ending." -- The New York Times Book Review
Award winning Robert D. San Souci lives in San Francisco, California. Acclaimed illustrator Terry Widener, lives in McKinney, Texas.
