Fox Tale

3 stars out of 53 stars out of 53 stars out of 53 stars out of 53 stars out of 5
Michael Foreman
Published by Andersen
32pp, 1 84270 542 3, £10.99 hbk
cover of Fox Tale

A fox cub tells the story of how his family lives on an urban railway bank, scavenging nightly for food as well as being fed by a kind old gent in the station car-park. When this benefactor is set upon and injured by a gang of hooded ‘man-cubs’, the foxes put the gang to flight while the gent is ambulanced away. A few nights later, one of the hoodies makes a wary car-park comeback, this time with fox-fodder. Equally warily, the foxes feed. Eventually the old gent limps back; by then the narrator has befriended the hoodie and they feed together, and watch the trains go by.

A simple ‘improving’ tale filled with Foreman’s accustomed luminous landscapes and indistinctly featured people. It is the excellence of the fox portraits that raises this picture book slightly above the unexceptional.

Reviewed in BfK No. 164 (May 2007) by Ted Percy (TP)
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