Dorothée Duntze Explained
Dorothée Duntze is a French-born illustrator of fairy tales.
Duntze was born in September 1960 in Reims, France.
Works
- Goodbye Little Bird (c. 1983) by Damjan Mischa and translated by Anthea Bell[1]
- The Princess and the Pea (c. 1985) by Hans Christian Andersen[2]
- Little Daylight (1987) by George MacDonald[3]
- The Golden Goose (c. 1989) adapted by Anthea Bell from original by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm[4]
- The Twelve Dancing Princesses (1995) translated by Anthea Bell from original by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm[5]
- The Six Swans translated by Anthea Bell from original by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm
- Hansel and Gretel (2001) translated by Anthea Bell from original by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm[6]
- Rapunzel (2005) translated by Anthea Bell from original by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm[7]
Notes and References
- McGinn . Barbara . Goodbye Little Bird (Book Review) . School Library Journal . October 1983 . 30 . 2 . 147.
- News: Kuskin . Karla . Children's Books . 29 October 2021 . The New York Times . 3 November 1985.
- Web site: Children's Book Review: Little Daylight . Publishers Weekly . 1 August 2021 . 1 September 1987.
- Van De Voorde . Ronald A. . The Golden Goose (Book) . School Library Journal . March 1989 . 35 . 7 . 174 . 10 October 2020 . 0362-8930.
- Negro . Janice Del . The Twelve Dancing Princesses . Booklist . February 1, 1996 . 92 . 11 . 1 August 2021 . American Library Association . Gale Literature Resource Center.
- Buckley . Barbara . Hansel and Gretel. (Preschool to grade 4: nonfiction) . School Library Journal . October 2001 . 47 . 10 . 140 . 10 October 2020.
- Cutler . Kirsten . Grimm, Jacob & Wilhelm Grimm. Rapunzel . School Library Journal . November 2005 . 51 . 11 . 115 . 10 October 2020.