Originally published in the Netherlands in 1964, this story won the Gouden Griffel award for the best children’s book. In 1968, an English translation, including illustrations by Gilliam Hume followed. It was reprinted in 1969, 1971, 1973, 1989, 1980 and 1987, as well as other translations through the years - German, Danish, Spanish and Afrikaans. This edition, to be published in 2022, includes an introduction by his daughter, Leonie Biegel, and new illustrations by Sally J Collins.
As this story begins, King Mansolain is near the end of his thousand-year reign, so it should come as no surprise that he is tired after serving for so long, and even more so as his health seems to be deteriorating. The king ’had a beard that spread about his feet like a rug, and on it slept a hare, the only creature that still looked after him now that King Masolain was almost forgotten.’ ’His servants had died one after the other until only the hare remained. So these two lived quietly together in the copper castle until the king began to cough so badly that his beard shook and the hare grew very anxious.' The Wonder Doctor determines that what he needs is something that will make his heart speed up, and so he prescribes a story each evening, one filled with thrills to keep his heart beating until the Wonder Doctor can ’fetch some leaves of the Golden Speedwell.’
The news of the need for storytellers spreads as the doctor makes his way to fetch these leaves with their magical properties, and as each night approaches, a different storyteller appears at the castle to tell a story. The first to arrive is a wolf who begins his story.
’My grandfather was the terrible Woe-Wolf of the Bare Flank,’ the wolf said. ‘And my story is about him. Listen…’
As the Wonder Doctor travels in search of these leaves to cure the King, there are many delays, and thus many stories shared over the nights until he returns.
This would make a wonderful bedtime story to read aloud to a child, or children, one chapter a night as the author once shared these stories with his own children. Each chapter shares a little of the twists and turns of the doctor’s journey, new characters, and adventure through the story shared each night as the new story-teller arrives to share his story with the King.
Pub Date: 29 Mar 2022
Many thanks for the ARC provided by Pushkin Press / Pushkin Children’s Books