Home
  • Home
  • Latest Issue
  • Past Issues
  • Authors & Artists
  • Articles
  • Reviews
  • News
  • Forums
  • Search

Princess Smartypants Breaks the Rules!

  • View
  • Rearrange

Digital version – browse, print or download

Can't see the preview?
Click here!

How to print the digital edition of Books for Keeps: click on this PDF file link - click on the printer icon in the top right of the screen to print.

BfK Newsletter

Receive the latest news & reviews direct to your inbox!

BfK No. 179 - November 2009

Cover Story
This issue’s cover illustration is from Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland illustrated by Robert Ingpen. Robert Ingpen is interviewed by Elizabeth Hammill. Thanks to Templar Publishing for their help with this November cover.

  • PDFPDF
  • Printer-friendly versionPrinter-friendly version
  • Send to friendSend to friend

Princess Smartypants Breaks the Rules!

Babette Cole
(Puffin)
32pp, 978-0141383613, RRP £10.99, Hardcover
5-8 Infant/Junior
Buy "Princess Smartypants Breaks the Rules!" on Amazon

‘Princess Smartypants breaks the rules’? – well what else would we expect of this feisty young royal? But her mother, the Queen, decides to sort out Smartypants’s propensity to behave in an unprincess-like fashion thereby deterring princely suitors; she will send her to finishing school.

Right from the start, Madame Twinklebotham, who runs the school, earmarks Smartypants as a troublemaker, and in terms of the perceived norms of deportment, fashion sense, weaving, spinning and wand-waving, she’s right. Smartypants soon converts her classmates to her more exciting curriculum for princess-like behaviour. At the end everyone breaks the rules; everyone apart from Madame Twinklebotham who, with a thwack of her wand, is transformed into a mouse by Smartypants who seems well-versed in that aspect of her tuition.

Beguilingly simple, soft lines convey attitude and action; a slight twist of a mouth, or a glance from the round, popping eyes of Cole’s characters tell a great deal. And there is so much to look at in her drawings. Cole, as usual, conveys a lot about gender-stereotyping and upending traditional expectations, whether those of the queen, or of any of her readers who might expect a princess to behave like a princess of the traditional sort.

Reviewer: 
Valerie Coghlan
4
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Help/FAQ
  • My Account