A clever girl’s efforts to win the smile of a Scottish prince lead to the origin of the unicorn.
When Prince Donald loses his smile, everyone in Scotland tries to help, but not one of the parties held, cakes baked, songs written, or fountains carved in his honor coaxes a smile. Hoping to amuse the prince with a new magical creature, the court magician mixes “fur and feathers, scales and claws,” but the resulting beast proves too frightening. Meanwhile, the magician’s granddaughter Hana invents her own special creature with a horse’s body, goat’s hooves, and a gazelle’s horn. She calls her creature a “unicorn.” When Prince Donald sees the beautiful unicorn, he can’t resist following it into the woods, where he and Hana eventually discover the magician’s banished beast, a winged lion with a scaly tail, fiercely attacking the gentle unicorn. As Donald helps the unicorn fight the beast, Hana relies on magic to transform the creature into a cat, a wren, and a lizard, saving the day. But will this earn her a smile from Prince Donald? Romantic illustrations in a medieval castle venue reinforce the fairy-tale elements of this retelling of a Scottish folktale, with the contemporary twist of a quick-thinking, brown-skinned female protagonist who comes to the rescue of the White prince. Full- and double-page close-ups of the lovely, white unicorn battling the fierce winged lion add memorable visual drama.
A likely pick for ubiquitous unicorn fans.
(author’s note) (Picture book. 5-8)