Chapeuzinho Amarelo

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Chapeuzinho Amarelo is a children's book written by musician Chico Buarque in 1970,[1] and later becoming known for having been illustrated by cartoonist and writer Ziraldo in 1979. The film was originally dedicated to Buarque's daughters and by 2017 there had been 40 editions released.[2]

It is known for being a retelling of Little Red Riding Hood addressing a story about overcoming fear.[3] It's considered a cult classic of Brazilian children's literature, it was awarded the Highly Recommended for Children seal from the National Children's Book Foundation (FNLIJ) in 1979 and won the Jabuti award in the Illustration category in 1998.[4]

Plot

The book tells a story in poetry form about a girl called Chapeuzinho Amarelo (lit. Little Yellow Riding Hood), a girl wearing a yellow hat who is known for being afraid of everything with her greatest fear being an imaginary wolf that she had never met and as her fears grew, the greater her fear of the wolf grew. After thinking so much about the wolf she decides to meet him, but after meeting him her fear gradually disappears until her fear for him disappears. The wolf, unhappy with seeing the girl lose her fear, decides to scare her by shouting "I'm a wolf!" several times, but Little Yellow laughs and ignores him until the wolf (reversing the syllables from lobo to bolo) turns into a cake that is afraid of being eaten by her. Little Yellow ignores the wolf and all her fears, and from then on starts to personify each creature that scares her in a different way, reversing the syllables of their names.

References

External links