I love Julius Lester, who has retold many folk tales with humor and a tenderness for the stories. He's both African and Jewish, so he chose tales from both cultures for this book. As he says in the afterword, he "has chosen to remove references to things that did not communicate to me as an American...by so doing I have chosen to emphasize the universal dimension of the story over the cultural where it was not possible to keep the two fused into one whole. To put it another way, I have done what any storyteller does: I have fitted the story to my mouth and tongue...I hope that you will fit these stories to your mouth and tongue." He includes a bibliography of where the stories came from and exactly how he changed them or if he left them intact. Retelling such stories as the Efik-Ibibio account of "Why the Sun and Moon Live in the Sky," the Masai tale "The Woman and the Tree Children" and the Jewish legend of "Why Dogs Chase Cats," Lester's versions emphasize the humor, tragedy, morality, and adventure of the stories. Logan's favorites were "How Many Spots Does a Leopard Have," What Dogs Chase Cats," "The Town Where Snoring Was Not Allowed," and "The Wonderful Healing Leaves." Neither L nor I have enjoyed David Shannon's illustrations in the past, but his work in this book is wonderful.