Review of His Fairytale Life: A Book About Hans Christian Andersen

His Fairytale Life: A Book About Hans Christian AndersenHis Fairytale Life: A Book About Hans Christian Andersen
by Jane Yolen; illus. by Brooke Boynton-Hughes
Primary    Porter/Holiday    32 pp.
4/25    9780823451036    $18.99
e-book ed.  9780823462261    $11.99

Winding through thirty-two pages of enchanting illustrations, one long sentence with a “once upon a time” feel deftly takes readers through the life story of Hans Christian Andersen (1805–1875). Each word must earn its place to make this construction work: “He was a boy who lived with a mother who could not read, but remembered every fairy tale she’d been told…” The text juxtaposes the incongruences of Andersen’s life: someone who cannot write as a child but wants to be a poet; later, a beloved author who is personally lonely. The soft watercolor, graphite, and pen-and-ink illustrations capitalize on these contrasts by bringing out details that invoke emotional response—a lanky teenage Andersen crouching at a child-size desk among very young children while learning to read is comical, heartrending, and hopeful all at once. The illustrations are especially effective when they incorporate Andersen’s own fairy tales, whether through small visual references or more fully realized scenes springing from his work or daydreams. For those just starting to learn about Andersen’s stories and life, the details included are engaging, and the text leaves enough that is open-ended to encourage further exploration. Yolen’s long poetic sentence ultimately ends in tribute: “Hans Christian Andersen—your own story more like a fairy tale than a life.” Back matter includes an extended biographical note and suggested additional reading.

From the May/June 2025 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.

Julie Roach

Julie Roach

Julie Roach, chair of the 2020 Caldecott Committee, is the collection development manager for the Boston Public Library.  

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