Picture Books

5 Picture Books From Unexpected Points of View

Once upon a time, everyone in story land knew who was good and who was bad. Monsters: bad! Orphaned kids: good! But for many years, storytellers have been having fun flipping the narratives laid down by Mother Goose, the Brothers Grimm, and Hans Christian Andersen. If you look at a story from a different perspective, the witch or the monster might be the good guy, and the dirt-eating worm might be the hero. Here are 5 fun topsy-turvy stories.

The Wolf Who Visited the Land of Fairy Tales (New Edition)

The Wolf Who Visited the Land of Fairy Tales (New Edition)

Hardcover $14.95

The Wolf Who Visited the Land of Fairy Tales (New Edition)

By Orianne Lallelmand
Illustrator Eleonore Thuillier

Hardcover $14.95

The Wolf Who Visited the Land of Fairy Tales, by Orianne Lallelmand and Eleonore Thuillier
When the Wolf decides to bake an apple cake and share it with the others at the spring picnic, he needs a little help: he doesn’t know how to bake! He heads to the forest to ask the creatures he encounters for baking advice, and he can’t understand why everyone is freaking out, from a little girl wearing a red hooded coat to a red hen to three little pigs.

The Wolf Who Visited the Land of Fairy Tales, by Orianne Lallelmand and Eleonore Thuillier
When the Wolf decides to bake an apple cake and share it with the others at the spring picnic, he needs a little help: he doesn’t know how to bake! He heads to the forest to ask the creatures he encounters for baking advice, and he can’t understand why everyone is freaking out, from a little girl wearing a red hooded coat to a red hen to three little pigs.

Seriously, Cinderella Is SO Annoying!: The Story of Cinderella as Told by the Wicked Stepmother

Seriously, Cinderella Is SO Annoying!: The Story of Cinderella as Told by the Wicked Stepmother

Paperback $9.99

Seriously, Cinderella Is SO Annoying!: The Story of Cinderella as Told by the Wicked Stepmother

By Trisha Speed Shaskan
Illustrator Gerald Guerlais

In Stock Online

Paperback $9.99

Seriously, Cinderella is So Annoying, by Trisha Speed Shaskan and Gerald Claude Guerlais
This book gives Cinderella’s “wicked” stepmother a chance to tell her side of the story. According to her, Cinderella is prone to telling “wild stories.” After the stepmother marries Cinderella’s dad, he leaves immediately on a business trip. The stepmother finds the house covered in dust, and Cinderella tells her stories nonstop about how “robins and sparrows are my friends” and that the squirrels did the laundry. Cinderella is sick and has lost her voice on the night of the royal ball, which is why her stepmother tells her to stay home in bed. Don’t believe the lies that girl spreads—I mean, she claims that a pumpkin turned into a carriage.

Seriously, Cinderella is So Annoying, by Trisha Speed Shaskan and Gerald Claude Guerlais
This book gives Cinderella’s “wicked” stepmother a chance to tell her side of the story. According to her, Cinderella is prone to telling “wild stories.” After the stepmother marries Cinderella’s dad, he leaves immediately on a business trip. The stepmother finds the house covered in dust, and Cinderella tells her stories nonstop about how “robins and sparrows are my friends” and that the squirrels did the laundry. Cinderella is sick and has lost her voice on the night of the royal ball, which is why her stepmother tells her to stay home in bed. Don’t believe the lies that girl spreads—I mean, she claims that a pumpkin turned into a carriage.

There's a Hair in My Dirt!: A Worm's Story

There's a Hair in My Dirt!: A Worm's Story

Paperback $16.99

There's a Hair in My Dirt!: A Worm's Story

By Gary Larson

In Stock Online

Paperback $16.99

There’s a Hair in My Dirt: A Worm’s Story, by Gary Larson
If you thought teenage humans were unique in their ability to complain about their lives to their parents, you haven’t met the little worm in this hilarious, science fact-filled story by Gary Larson. When he finds a hair in his plate of dinner dirt, the little worm has an outburst. “I hate being a worm! We’re the lowest of the low! Bottom of the food chain! Bird food! Fish bait!” The little worm’s dad tells a long, weird story to try to convince him that being a worm is, in fact, tops.

There’s a Hair in My Dirt: A Worm’s Story, by Gary Larson
If you thought teenage humans were unique in their ability to complain about their lives to their parents, you haven’t met the little worm in this hilarious, science fact-filled story by Gary Larson. When he finds a hair in his plate of dinner dirt, the little worm has an outburst. “I hate being a worm! We’re the lowest of the low! Bottom of the food chain! Bird food! Fish bait!” The little worm’s dad tells a long, weird story to try to convince him that being a worm is, in fact, tops.

Hello, Monster!

Hello, Monster!

Hardcover $14.95

Hello, Monster!

By Clémentine Beauvais
Illustrator Maisie Paradise Shearring

In Stock Online

Hardcover $14.95

Hello, Monster!, by Clémentine Beauvais and Maisie Paradise Shearring
This new book tells the story of a little boy whose mother always tells him to go play with another boy at the playground who’s alone in the sandbox. The narrator is dubious, however. What if that isn’t a little boy at all, but a monster in disguise? This book is topsy-turvy not because it tells the story from an unusual perspective, but because there’s no tidy moral at the end of it. After taking a wild flight of fancy about the strange boy he doesn’t know, the narrator chooses not to speak to him, after all.

Hello, Monster!, by Clémentine Beauvais and Maisie Paradise Shearring
This new book tells the story of a little boy whose mother always tells him to go play with another boy at the playground who’s alone in the sandbox. The narrator is dubious, however. What if that isn’t a little boy at all, but a monster in disguise? This book is topsy-turvy not because it tells the story from an unusual perspective, but because there’s no tidy moral at the end of it. After taking a wild flight of fancy about the strange boy he doesn’t know, the narrator chooses not to speak to him, after all.

The Very Smart Pea and the Princess-to-be

The Very Smart Pea and the Princess-to-be

Paperback $7.99

The Very Smart Pea and the Princess-to-be

By Mini Grey

In Stock Online

Paperback $7.99

The Very Smart Pea and the Princess-to-be, by Mini Grey
Okay, we’ve heard from wolves, stepmothers and worms, but who will speak up for the vegetable community? Leave it to the star of this story, a pea born in humble circumstances in the royal vegetable garden, who nevertheless knows that “Somehow, I would be important.” The crabby queen has been nagging her 34-year-old son to get married or he’ll lose his allowance. When he rejects every princess he meets for a year, the queen insists that a real princess will be able to feel a pea under a pile of 20 mattresses as she sleeps, and that he should marry the first one who does. When none of the potential princesses can feel the pea, the pea has to take matters into his own hands.

The Very Smart Pea and the Princess-to-be, by Mini Grey
Okay, we’ve heard from wolves, stepmothers and worms, but who will speak up for the vegetable community? Leave it to the star of this story, a pea born in humble circumstances in the royal vegetable garden, who nevertheless knows that “Somehow, I would be important.” The crabby queen has been nagging her 34-year-old son to get married or he’ll lose his allowance. When he rejects every princess he meets for a year, the queen insists that a real princess will be able to feel a pea under a pile of 20 mattresses as she sleeps, and that he should marry the first one who does. When none of the potential princesses can feel the pea, the pea has to take matters into his own hands.

What picture books from topsy-turvy points of view do you love?