School Library Journal Review
K-Gr 3-This picture book retelling of the original Hoffmann tale, which was written 200 years ago, is illustrated with rich, painterly precision and dreamlike details that echo the story's shifts from reality to fantasy. Gears and clockwork elements appear throughout, and the seven-headed Mouse King is particularly realistic, down to the whiskers. The storytelling is straightforward, and neither the battle scene nor the foray to Candytown is very long or graphic. VERDICT A gorgeously made edition for collectors and literature experts.-Virginia Walter, UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
Raecke (The Fisherman and His Wife) impressively adapts Hoffmann's original story of the Nutcracker, using evocative yet accessible language to bring the story to a picture book audience. On page after page, Russian artist Sedova, who illustrated a 2014 adaptation of The Snow Queen, fully embraces the magical events of young Marie Stahlbaum's Christmas Eve, incorporating visual references to clockwork gears that reflect Godfather Drosselmeier's mechanical talents, as well as mice, stars, candies, and other thematic elements. The battle scene never becomes too violent-curls of ribbon and bursts of paint abstractly suggest weapon fire-and Marie's journey into Candytown and beyond with the transformed Nutcracker is full of intriguing images that readers will want to study closely. Raecke leaves readers with Marie's realization that "the most truly marvelous things may be seen-if only people choose to look," a message worth remembering throughout the year. Ages 5-7. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.