Parents' Guide to

The Tale of Despereaux: Being the Story of a Mouse, a Princess, Some Soup, and a Spool of Thread

By Matt Berman, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 8+

Brave mouse adventure a modern classic; great read-aloud.

The Tale of Despereaux: Being the Story of a Mouse, a Princess, Some Soup, and a Spool of Thread Poster Image

A Lot or a Little?

What you will—and won't—find in this book.

Community Reviews

age 9+

Based on 21 parent reviews

age 13+

Really dark tale

Honestly, I’m a bit horrified that this is a supposed to be a child’s book(?). The content is dark and scary, and many descriptive passages are unnecessarily creepy ( including death, blood, screams of terror and agony, etc) . My sons first grade teacher assigned this as a book for the class, and here I am reading it to my 7yo and having to heavily edit as I read aloud, in the hopes that I can avoid him having nightmares about being eaten alive by evil rats in a pitch black dungeon that flows with blood and muck. Charming, eh? WTH?
age 16+

very dark and violent, full of characters being cruel to each other

Common Sense Media gives this book a very positive “is it any good” and “what parents need to know” review— my experience was definitely the opposite. The book is very dark and violent— a huge percentage of the time the characters are being cruel to each other. Many of parental figures in the book are particularly horrific: a father who sells his daughter into slavery; a person whom a six year old calls “uncle” who beats her so regularly that she loses her hearing and her ears are shaped like cauliflower; a father who serves on a jury and votes to send his son to death in the dungeon. There are very few positive role models for how beings can be kind to each other. Yes, it all gets wrapped up in the end in a fairly positive way, but violence and cruelty are the norm all the way there.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (21 ):
Kids say (31 ):

Kate DiCamillo can do charming. Her debut novel, "Because of Winn-Dixie," was simple and enchanting. Despereaux's tale is more complex and stylized: The author directly addresses the reader throughout, and the hero disappears for nearly a hundred pages. But it has charm in buckets, perfectly matched by Timothy Ering's delightfully weird illustrations.

THE TALE OF DESPEREAUX hits the trifecta for a children's book: It makes a great read-alone, read-aloud, or reading group book. It's easy to read, despite its length and sometimes advanced vocabulary, and perfectly paced and plotted to hold a middle-grade reader's interest. The direct address makes it perfect for involving listeners in the reading. And that same way of talking to the reader allows the author to raise questions that would make for interesting literature group discussions.

Book Details

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