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Saint Francis and the Wolf

Jane Langton Ilse Plume

$39.95   $34.35

Hardback

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English
David R. Godine Publisher Inc
27 August 2019
Saint Francis was born in 1182, the son of a wealthy merchant. After a swashbuckling youth in Assisi, he had a change of faith and decided to live the life that he ascribed to Jesus, one of poverty and abstinence. He gave away everything he owned. His father disowned him. But over the years he drew to himself a substantial following of men and women and died revered and beloved in 1225. Three years later, he was canonized as Saint Francis of Assisi by Pope Gregory IX. This lovely retelling of one of the lesser known of the Saint Francis lessons centres on the legend of the great wolf of Gubbio, a ferocious canine who terrorized the town and was slowly reducing it to penury and starvation. In nearby Assisi, Brother Francis heard of their plight and came to their rescue. Unbelievingly, the villagers watched from the ramparts as Brother Francis called to the wolf, tamed it with his tenderness, and made it pledge that if the people of Gubbio would care for it, he would do them no harm. He took the pledge and lived in harmony with the citizens of the city until his death.
By:  
Illustrated by:   Ilse Plume
Imprint:   David R. Godine Publisher Inc
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 232mm,  Width: 188mm,  Spine: 12mm
Weight:   322g
ISBN:   9781567923209
ISBN 10:   1567923208
Pages:   32
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 1 to 5 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  Children / Juvenile
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Jane Langton has retold the legend with her usual lucidity and grace, and Ilse Plume, an Italophile and the illustrator of three previous Godine books, has supplied illustrations that glow with the intensity of Renaissance jewelry. A perfect gift for anyone who embraces the relationship between man and the natural world.

Reviews for Saint Francis and the Wolf

The people of Gubbio, threatened by a hungry, howling wolf, are trapped inside the walls of their city. Francis, the 12th-century Italian saint, who has given away all that he had, comes to address the beast. Francis secures its promise that if the town will feed the wolf, they will not have to fear for their children or their livestock. Langton, a fine and venerable writer for children and adults, couches the familiar story in clear cadences. Plume's illustrations are exquisite: A framed image in dry pure colors faces each page of text in a lovely, readable font. A grace note - flowers, fruit, vines - at the bottom of each page of text reflects a motif of the facing image. Francis's Canticle of the Sun fills the endpapers, surrounded by flowers and small creatures. About as different in form and feeling from Michael Bedard's The Wolf of Gubbio (2000) as can be imagined, but captures the same luminous, sweet essence of the tale. (Nonfiction. 6-10) (Kirkus Reviews)


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