The Adventures of Abdi FROM OUR EDITORS
The Barnes & Noble Review
A young boy goes on a magical errand in Madonna's fourth lavish picture book for children. Set "in a land far away from the one we know," this lesson about life's riches follows young Abdi, an orphan who is instructed to bring the queen a necklace for her birthday. On his journey through the desert, Abdi meets a group of Bedouins, two of whom decide to steal the necklace and replace it with a snake. Abdi is thrown in prison when the royals discover his "trickery," but with the help of a guardian (who reveals that things are not as they seem), the queen gets her necklace and the two thieves get their comeuppance. Brought brilliantly to life by illustrators Olga Dugina and Andrej Dugin, this is one feast for the eyes that also provides food for thought. Breathtaking illustrations with sandy hues and intricate Middle Eastern designs create scenes of mind-bending, surreal fantasy, leaving readers to wonder what dreamy adventure Madonna will conjure next. Matt Warner
ANNOTATION
B&N Video Exclusive: See Madonna's thank you to Barnes & Noble customers (:46) and her introduction to the series (3:14).
FROM THE PUBLISHER
"The power of certainty is without limits."
Abdi is a little boy who has been given a very big task. He is to deliver the most precious necklace in the world -- made by Eli, his teacher and a master jeweler -- to the queen. Along the way he is robbed in the desert, thrown in a dungeon, and has a surprising encounter with a snake. But no matter what obstacles he faces, Abdi never gives up hope, guided by Eli's wisdom that everything that happens in life is for the best.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
This rococo vision of a tale takes place "in a land far away from the one we know, where sand and mountains stretched as far as the eye could see, and snake charmers wandered the streets." Young Abdi, an orphan, assists a white-bearded, brown-robed jeweler named Eli, said to possess "magical powers." One day, the two receive an urgent commission, to craft a necklace for the queen that "must shine like the sun and move like a snake." They set to work, and the exhausted Eli finally tells Abdi to carry the necklace to the palace. The boy hops aboard a camel with some "Bedouins" and, inevitably, snoozes while two thieves steal the precious necklace. Abdi, who arrives at the palace with a real (but friendly) snake in his purse, conducts himself according to Eli's advice: "Without certainty, we can accomplish nothing.... You must say to yourself, `I am sure it is for the best!' " Ultimately the snake transforms into jewelry when the cooperative queen tries it on. In Dugina and Dugin's sumptuous images, the elaborate floral motifs, beautifully draped clothing and weird creatures suggest what might happen if Michelangelo and Bosch got together to paint a mosque. Eli and Abdi inhabit a land of animal-people and orientalism run amok; a cobra-bodied man plays a flute, dark-skinned dwarves assist the milky-skinned queen and a gazelle sports a turbaned person's head. Some readers may be troubled by this harem-chic depiction of an exotic Middle East and its simplistic "it is for the best" philosophy. However, Abdi himself possesses the firm certitude and great luck of a folk hero. Ages 4-8. (Nov.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.