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No one in the town of Bonnyripple ever kept a grudge. No one, that is, except old Cornelius, the Grudge Keeper." So begins this original fairy tale that provides a literal illustration of the idiom "holding a grudge." Three grudges are born in scene-setting vignettes: Minnie's goat eats Elvira Bogg's prizewinning zinnias. A schoolboy snatches the schoolmaster's toupee. And tragically, clumsy Big Otto "stomp[s] on Lily Belle's new shoes at the spring fling." The grudges are actual pieces of paper that the angry, pinch-faced people hand over to a gentle old man named Cornelius. His house is jammed full with these scrolls, each one representing a hurt feeling. But one night, the wind begins to blow. Like a tornado, it rips through town, blowing out candles and flinging pies into the air. The next morning, the people of Bonnyripple storm up to Cornelius' house with all their new complaints. But what has happened to all the grudges? More importantly, what has happened to Cornelius? Rockliff has created a clever fable characterized by ornate language, extraordinary characters and billowy atmosphere. "Tiffs and huffs, squabbles and quibbles—all the grudges had been tossed away, down to the last small scrap of pique." Wheeler's strong, witty ink-and-watercolor illustrations combine with the text to humorously demonstrate that "holding a grudge" is a bad thing. Wordplay and humor provide an effective vehicle for a valuable moral. (Picture book. 5-8)
ALA Booklist (Tue Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2014)In what looks like a charming European village of yesteryear, gray-haired old Cornelius works his hands to the bone as keeper of everyone's grudges: "ruffled feathers, petty snits, minor tiffs and major huffs, insults, umbrage, squabbles, dust-ups, and imbroglios." Rockliff physicalizes this abstract notion by presenting grudges as rolled-up pieces of paper that the kindly fellow has to stuff in every cranny of his house. All of the negativity goes out the window (literally) when a storm sends the grudges swirling into the open: "Squabbles were scrambled with quibbles. Low blows rested high up in the pile." Somewhat oddly, this doesn't lead to a humorous mix-up of grudges; instead, the townspeople find their original grudges and get mad all over again ddenly, they decide to throw them aside. The abrupt ending doesn't fulfill the early promise and clever premise, but Rockliff's wordplay is a joy, while Wheeler's Dickensian group of scowlers is pleasant to watch en when they get happy.
Horn Book (Fri Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2014)In Bonnyripple, "ruffled feathers, petty snits," etc. are taken to old Cornelius, the Grudge Keeper, who stows them away in his cottage's nooks and crannies. When wind tosses the quibbles about, burying Cornelius, villagers ban together to dig him out, working out their wrinkles. Clever details in Wheeler's pen, ink, and watercolor illustrations support Rockliff's parable about getting along by letting things go.
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)No one in the town of Bonnyripple ever kept a grudge. No one, that is, except old Cornelius, the Grudge Keeper." So begins this original fairy tale that provides a literal illustration of the idiom "holding a grudge." Three grudges are born in scene-setting vignettes: Minnie's goat eats Elvira Bogg's prizewinning zinnias. A schoolboy snatches the schoolmaster's toupee. And tragically, clumsy Big Otto "stomp[s] on Lily Belle's new shoes at the spring fling." The grudges are actual pieces of paper that the angry, pinch-faced people hand over to a gentle old man named Cornelius. His house is jammed full with these scrolls, each one representing a hurt feeling. But one night, the wind begins to blow. Like a tornado, it rips through town, blowing out candles and flinging pies into the air. The next morning, the people of Bonnyripple storm up to Cornelius' house with all their new complaints. But what has happened to all the grudges? More importantly, what has happened to Cornelius? Rockliff has created a clever fable characterized by ornate language, extraordinary characters and billowy atmosphere. "Tiffs and huffs, squabbles and quibbles—all the grudges had been tossed away, down to the last small scrap of pique." Wheeler's strong, witty ink-and-watercolor illustrations combine with the text to humorously demonstrate that "holding a grudge" is a bad thing. Wordplay and humor provide an effective vehicle for a valuable moral. (Picture book. 5-8)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Wheeler-s (Miss Maple-s Seeds) sure hand and lyrical pen-and-ink spreads are the source of this story-s charm. Long skirts billow, the fairy-tale cottage of Cornelius the Grudge Keeper leans sweetly to one side, and the white scraps of paper on which villagers have written their grudges billow and drift like sea foam. The story holds few surprises as the villagers discover that nursing grudges leads only to heartbreak, while forgiveness brings happiness. Rockliff-s (Me and Momma and Big John) rococo wordplay is an apt match for Wheeler-s artwork: -Ruffled feathers, petty suits, minor tiffs and major huffs, insults, umbrage, squabbles, dust-ups, and imbroglios-the Grudge Keeper received them all.- The clever prose is, at times, more likely to sail over the heads of younger readers and head for older members of the audience: -Low blows rested high up in the pile. High dudgeon had drifted down low.- In an effort to introduce a contemporary note into the traditional setting, Wheeler makes the romance between Big Otto and Lily Belle an interracial one. On the whole, it-s a sweet, fluffy diversion. Ages 4-8. (Apr.)
School Library Journal (Sat Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2014)K-Gr 2 No one in the picturesque village of Bonnyripple ever holds a grudge. Instead, they write down their tiffs and snits, umbrage and squabbles and give them to Cornelius, the Grudge Keeper. Cornelius files the grudges within his rambling house until the rolls of paper fill his rooms and flow down the front steps. When a mighty wind scatters the grudges into an unruly pile, Cornelius is buried underneath. As the villagers work together to dig him out, they forget their grudges and renew their friendships. This is an especially attractive picture book, with pen-and-ink and watercolor illustrations dominated by warm shades of yellow, brown, and gold. Wheeler's eye-catching cartoon drawings are busy with activity and whimsical detail that adds fullness to this simple, pleasant tale, and Rockliff's telling is sprightly. This book will resonate most with teachers and adults looking to share stories about the value of forgiveness. Marilyn Taniguchi, Beverly Hills Public Library, CA
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
ALA Booklist (Tue Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2014)
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Horn Book (Fri Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2014)
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
National Council For Social Studies Notable Children's Trade
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal (Sat Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2014)
Wilson's Children's Catalog
How do you resolve a grudge? Take it to the Grudge Keeper! But be careful not to accumulate too many.
No one in the town of Bonnyripple ever kept a grudge. No one, that is, except Cornelius, the Grudge Keeper. Ruffled feathers, petty snits, minor tiffs and major huffs, insults, umbrage, squabbles, dust-ups, and imbroglios—the Grudge Keeper received them all, large and small, tucking each one carefully away in his ramshackle cottage.
Gradually the grudges accumulate as Minnie Fletcher’s goat eats Elvira Bogg’s prizewinning petunias, Sylvester Quincy snags the schoolmaster’s toupee, and Big Otto stomps on Lily Belle’s feet during the spring fling.
One night the wind rises, flinging together the people and their grudges, scrambling the squabbles with the quibbles and piling the lows blows and the high dudgeon together. And where is Cornelius?