![]() ![]() Back in the day, the Brothers Grimm used their stories to warn us against going into the woods alone, talking to strangers and eating at random people’s houses - at least two of which were legitimate dangers at the time. Sneaking lessons and morals into children’s stories might seem like trying to con a picky eater by discreetly tucking spinach into a meatball, but it’s a tradition as old as fairy tales themselves. THE BOOK OF BOY By Catherine Gilbert Murdock 320 pp. THE UNICORN QUEST By Kamilla Benko 336 pp. ![]() ![]() THE LOST RAINFOREST: MEZ’S MAGIC By Eliot Schrefer 368 pp. ![]()
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