Book Descriptions
for The Spider and the Fly by Mary Botham Howitt and Tony DiTerlizzi
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Even young readers will know that things do not bode well for Fly, when Spider invites her to “walk into my parlor.” DiTerlizzi stages his adaptation of Mary Howitt’s tale as a gothic horror film, circa Hollywood of the 1920s and ’30s. Fly is an innocent ingénue, fresh off the bus, and Spider is cast as a wealthy predator in top hat and tails. He urges Fly to indulge in his hospitality, while licking his lips in anticipation of his prey. Insect ghosts of Spider’s previous meals point to a volume of “The Joy of Cooking Bugs” in an attempt to warn Fly of Spider’s evil intentions. But oblivious Fly falls victim to her own vanity and Spider’s smooth talk. The blatant moralizing of this 19th-century cautionary tale is wonderfully offset by the humor of the grisly illustrations, which seem to glow with a silvery light, created using black and white gouache reproduced in silver and black duotone. (Ages 5-9)
CCBC Choices 2003 . © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2003. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
Breathing new life into Howitt's 175-year-old warning against those who use sweet words to hide their not-so-sweet intentions, DiTerlizzi draws inspiration from classic Hollywood movies for the dazzling silver-tinted illustrations in this monstrously entertaining picture book.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.