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The Duchess Of Whimsy
 
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The Duchess Of Whimsy [Hardcover]

Randall de Seve , Peter de Seve
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Product Description

Product Description

The great New Yorker artist Peter de Seve teams up with the author of bestselling Toy Boat in a slightly outrageous fairy tale.

The Duchess of Whimsy is fancy and fussy — and definitely not ordinary — surrounding herself with wild friends, fabulous foods, and fancy dress. The Earl of Norm (ho hum) is completely ordinary, but he adores the Duchess. She ignores him, until the chef gets sick, and her friends have to make a super supper — which includes tracking down truffles, spinning sugar stars, and looking for quail eggs.

But the Earl is hungry! He sneaks off to an ordinary grilled cheese sandwich — and suddenly takes the Duchess's eye. Maybe there's something to simplicity after all. Maybe there's something to the Earl after all...

This deliciously told and illustrated love story by the remarkable de Seves shows how utterly charming and extraordinary a picture book can be.

About the Author

Randall de Seve and Peter de Seve live in Brooklyn, New York.

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5.0 out of 5 stars for the love of cheese, Dec 20 2009
By 
elfdart - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: The Duchess Of Whimsy (Hardcover)
this is a cute story about the duchess of whimsy and the earl of norm. as the name indicates, the duchess of whimsy is.. whimsical. she loves having fun, bright colours and is the life of the party. and the earl of norm is 'normal' aka quiet/ introverted. the earl admires the duchess because of her spirit and tries to get her to notice him, but she thinks he's normal and doesn't like him. one day the duchess's chef gets a cold on the day she's having one of her parties and so all of the guests begin trying to help make dinner. all of her friends are like her so they want to make outlandish dishes but the earl just makes grilled cheese. the duchess is interested and takes a bite and loves it, and then she and the earl become friends. she sees how she's like him and he sees how he's like her. it's an opposites attract story. it's sweet even though it's been done before. the art is amazing. its very colourful and fun.
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Amazon.com: 4.8 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)

14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Tis a gift to be simple, Nov 8 2009
By E. R. Bird "Ramseelbird" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Duchess Of Whimsy (Hardcover)
I don't think that every single picture book out there needs to have a moral, but it's not a terrible idea if they happen to contain stories that instruct just a tad on the side. Children's stories offer every possible morality tale you can imagine too. Don't steal. Be polite to your baby sister. Don't eat food you find on the street (unless, apparently, it has fallen from the sky). The thing about The Duchess of Whimsy is that for all its overwhelming beauty and fun, its moral is b...more I don't think that every single picture book out there needs to have a moral, but it's not a terrible idea if they happen to contain stories that instruct just a tad on the side. Children's stories offer every possible morality tale you can imagine too. Don't steal. Be polite to your baby sister. Don't eat food you find on the street (unless, apparently, it has fallen from the sky). The thing about The Duchess of Whimsy is that for all its overwhelming beauty and fun, its moral is based in practicality. The gist: fun people and sensible people need one another. Put another way, there is room in this world for glam and glitter and room in this world for sense and sensibility. So behold the picture book that tells small children that as fun as the quirky folks out there can be, everyone needs a little bit of normalcy to keep the world going round. Cause while whimsy's all well and good, it won't get you a grilled cheese sandwich in the end.

The Duchess of Whimsy was, to be frank, the life of the party. The Earl of Norm was not. While the Duchess reveled in the spectacular, the Earl was down-to-earth and downright ordinary. The problem with this? He was also positively smitten with the Duchess and keen to impress her in any way. This meant doing things out of his nature, like bringing in hungry giraffes, composing painful odes, and wearing flamboyant, gaudy costumes. The Duchess was, to say the least, not impressed until the day the cook took sick. While all her friends attempted to cook ridiculous complicated recipes, the Earl went for a simple grilled cheese sandwich and a cold glass of milk. Amazed that something so uncomplicated could be so good, the two got to talking and found they had quite a lot to say. From that time on they enjoyed one another's company, for when it came to personality these two found each other to be "simply extraordinary".

Author Randall de Seve tried her hand at picture books first with a small unobtrusive little number called Toy Boat, illustrated by Loren Long. It was sweet and it was simple. So The Duchess of Whimsy marks her departure from quiet intimate tales to something a little more raucous, ribald, and robust. I found that I loved the writing in this book. The pacing appears to be perfect and the characters crystal clear. Though she eschews the company of the Earl of Norm right from the start, you don't ever get the feeling that the Duchess is a bad sort. She just happens to have a lot on her plate and the Earl's overenthusiasm is, admittedly, a bit grating. And can I give enough thanks that this story wasn't written in rhyme? It reads beautifully with its own interior cadence and style. You won't have any problem holding a child's attention with this text. If there was any excess to it, it was excised in the editing long ago.

Ms. de Seve shares this book with her husband, its illustrator. If Peter de Seve's art looks familiar to you, it may be because he's done his fair share of New Yorker magazine covers, with the occasional musical comedy poster on the side. In this, his first picture book, he packs the pages full of colorful, but never gaudy, images and colors. He also makes particular use of his white backgrounds. It's funny, but when you think back on his images, you may forget that they were presented in this way. Generally, de Seve indulges in ruffles, truffles, furbelows, and feathers. The sheer exhausting enormity of his images (and the million and one tiny details hidden within) would undoubtedly be too much if his backgrounds were anything more that pure unadulterated white. So even if a scene has a background (as when the party guests take over the unfortunate cook's kitchen), there's white on the opposite page, allowing for a little spillover from the madness across the way.

As for those aforementioned details, de Seve isn't afraid to pack his pages full of them. If you watch some of the guests early on you'll note that their outfits match the foods they try to make later on. The giraffe mentioned as an unfortunate attempt on the Earl's part to get the Duchess's attention early on, reappears at the final banquet taking a nibble on her hair's fancy fashions. Heck, the banquet for that matter is chock full of remarkable insights, like the fact that the knight we've seen in the background all this time is actually a girl, the king is a fan of a good curly straw, and the bird on the crest of his crown appears to change its expressions as the situation demands.

I don't know de Seves personally. Never met them a day of my life. Don't know where they live or what they look like or any of that. I do know, however, that when illustrators put people that they know into their books, those people have a very distinctive look to them. Marla Frazee did it with her husband in Roller Coaster and darned if I don't think that the two little fairies in this book don't look like they might be the de Seves daughters. I know that the Earl's dog in the book has to be their dog. It's a little pit bull with a splotch over one eye that can't be anything but a family dog, but the little fairies who look to be five years apart in age... yeah. Those are their kids. I'll bet you dollars to donuts on that one. Take a look for yourself and see. It's glaringly obvious from the title page. Plus what kid wouldn't want to become a fairy in a book?

The fellow tale I was reminded of directly after finishing this book was King Bidgood's in the Bathtub. Both are whimsical over-the-top confections of silliness and delight. Both show royalty at its most raucous, placing fancy folk in their fancier wear in positions of extreme silliness and ineptitude. And though their stories differ, the feel of these books is remarkably the same. Both are a ton of fun and kids who love poring over tiny details will have a hard time not gaping and gawking over Whimsy as often as they do Bidgood.

If you find that you've a Fancy Nancy follower in your life and you wish in inject into their brain something just as fancy, but a little more . . . I dunno . . . filling, The Duchess of Whimsy is made to order. Kids will find themselves turning back to read and reread the story over and over again (if they can wrench the book from the hands of their parents, trying to do the very same thing). It's nice to find a good original fairy tale, and this one certainly fits the bill. The ordinary and the extraordinary combine in a book that is certain to be beloved by every ordinary and extraordinary child out there today. Magical.

For ages 4-8.

10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Duchess of Whimsy, Nov 2 2009
By Shelley Sommer "sommerreading.com" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Duchess Of Whimsy (Hardcover)
I closed the book and got to my computer as fast as I could. My goal was to let you know about The Duchess of Whimsy by Randall de Seve as soon as I could and to encourage you to get this book. In fact, if you are looking for a good picture book for holiday giving - this is it. Let's back up. Earlier this fall, I heard that Peter de Seve, one of my favorite cover artists of The New Yorker was illustrating a book by his wife, Randall. On that basis alone, I ordered the book. I know - it could be considered a flimsy reason to purchase a book sight unseen. But this time, the gamble more than paid off. What a delightful story - and it even has a moral to it, but not one that bangs the reader over the head!

The text and illustrations work beautifully together and even include a few fun jokes for the careful observer. My guess is that the two fairies that appear throughout the book are the de Seve daughters. They mention the two of them in the author's bio and they are so lovingly drawn that it leaves little question about their identity. There are so many children who ask for stories about royalty and princesses, but many of them are just pink pages that reinforce the whole Disney idea of princess-dom. This is the one you want to give your little royalty watcher! And to any other child (or adult) who appreciates a good story which reminds us that the world would be quite dull if everyone were the same.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Charming, Sep 13 2010
By Rissi Cherie "goddess of fenestrations" - Published on Amazon.com
Charming drawings, engaging story. I am just getting into purchasing children's books for pre-readers. This doesn't bore the reader and there are lots of items in the pictures and the story to digress from the story for even more entertainment for the child.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 10 reviews  4.8 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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