Here is my review posted to the Contra Costa County Library reviews:
San Souci, Daniel. The Rabbit and the Dragon King: Based on a Korean Folk Tale. Illustrated by Eujin Kim Neilan. Boyds Mills Press, Inc., 2002. 32 pages. Tr. $17.95 ISBN 1-56397-880-6; PLB $26.51 ISBN 1-41316-866-3
The moral of this story, a retelling of a Korean tale from the 7th century, is that you should fully appreciate the life you are living, lest it be plucked from you by illness or apathy. In The Rabbit and the Dragon King, a hypochondriac ruler sends a turtle to find a cure for what ails him. A complacent rabbit is the unwitting victim who cleverly avoids sacrifice while healing herself and the dragon king of their ailments with her will to live. This folk tale retold by Daniel San Souci exposes some of the common symptoms of a comfortable life. The colorful illustrations by Eujin Kim Neilan bring the story to life. An interesting cast of players supports the main characters: the dragon king’s wife (“Belief, not medicine, is what he needs!”), the cuttlefish physician, the puffer fish magician who targets the rabbit as the source of the cure, and a team of volunteers that include a toothy shark, a swordfish, and an octopus. The author’s mention of a relationship between the ancestors of the wise turtle and the clever bunny will help children to feel that they know these characters well. The picture book design, the subtle humor, and the brilliantly detailed art make this book an excellent choice for story time reading for older children.
The author’s model source note credits Korea’s Shila Dynasty, A. D. 642, for the origin of this timeless tale. The tale has often been called The Hare’s Liver, but this version features the rabbit’s heart as the source of the king’s cure. Illustrator Neilan was born in Korea and currently lives in Boston. The note states she has drawn from both Eastern and Western sources in her beautiful depiction of the undersea world of the dragons and the rabbit’s island home. The dramatic brush strokes that overlay the deep tones of the paintings bring texture to the images of the swirling waters of the ocean and rabbit’s island home. This is the second Korean tale compiled by San Souci and Neilan. In the Moonlight Mist, published in 1999, tells the story of good-hearted woodcutter who finds a heavenly wife.
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