The original illustrations for 'Bone Button Borscht' were done by Aubrey Davis, who also wrote the story. His artwork has this charming, folksy style that perfectly matches the humor and warmth of the tale. The way he draws the villagers' exaggerated expressions when they taste the soup is hilarious—it’s like their faces melt into pure bliss. The textures feel handmade, with rough pencil lines and watercolor washes that give it a cozy, timeless vibe. If you enjoy this style, check out 'Stone Soup' by Marcia Brown—it’s another classic with a similar feel.
Aubrey Davis handled both the writing and illustrations for 'Bone Button Borscht,' and his artistic approach is worth dissecting. The illustrations use a muted palette of browns, yellows, and reds, echoing the rustic setting of the story. Davis’s linework is loose but precise, capturing movement—like the villagers scrambling for buttons—with kinetic energy. The compositions are clever too; he often frames scenes from odd angles, like looking down at the soup pot from above to emphasize its emptiness.
What’s neat is how Davis balances humor and heart. The beggar’s sly smiles contrast with the villagers’ greed, and tiny details (like a cat stealing a fish in the background) reward careful readers. If you appreciate this layered storytelling through art, try 'The Fool of the World and the Flying Ship' by Uri Shulevitz—it shares that blend of wit and visual richness.
Aubrey Davis’s illustrations in 'Bone Button Borscht' are deceptively simple. At first glance, they look like quick sketches, but they’re packed with storytelling. Take the beggar’s threadbare coat—the patches are drawn with just a few squiggly lines, but you instantly grasp his poverty. Davis excels at visual jokes, like the way the villagers’ noses twitch when they smell the imaginary borscht. His backgrounds are sparse, pushing focus onto character interactions, which makes the chaos funnier.
For fans of this style, I’d recommend 'The Magic Porridge Pot' by Paul Galdone. Both books use art to amplify folkloric humor, though Galdone’s work is more detailed. Davis’s minimalism makes 'Bone Button Borscht' feel like a fireside tale—raw and immediate.
2025-06-24 07:04:49
17
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Soup Shop Mystery
Seventeen
10
4.6K
There's a little shop downstairs that sells organ soup. It's always packed with customers. People line up as if bewitched, eager for a bowl.
I've often wondered what secret ingredient made their soup so irresistible.
This afternoon, I finally found my answer. Floating in my bowl was a piece of human skin—inked with a tattoo I knew all too well.
It was the one etched on my boyfriend's arm.
Just when I was about to step through airport security for my Around-the-World trip, I heard the twins in my womb, a boy and a girl, shouting.
'Mom! Can you stop thinking about going to have fun? The whole world is going to become a frozen block of ice in a month! You're still thinking about flying around at a time like this? Don't be silly!'
'My brother's right! Hurry home and stock up on food and medicine already! Renovate our mansion! Turn the garden into food storage! Turn the swimming pool into a reservoir!'
My heart skipped a beat, and the milk in my hand spilled all over the floor.
The passenger behind me urged me impatiently, "Can you hurry up? You're holding everyone up."
I ignored him. Instead, I turned around and called my assistant.
I also gave him another order.
"Get me ten thousand pounds of grains and five thousand pounds of pork belly. The ones with the skin on. I want them now!"
From that moment on, Kirsten, the woman in Harbor City who only knew how to burn money and fly all over the world, changed.
She became Kirsten, ruler of the frozen wasteland.
The Frost Demon Morozko, Prince of Russia's immortal land of Buyan, has waited ages for a mate. And she is Stravinksy's fabled Firebird - incarnated as an orphaned witch!
Cast out by the King of the Ice Kingdom, Morozko wanders Buyan, a Miyazaki haven for cherti, nechist, and witches - but a dark curse plagues the land - Koschei the Deathless.
Can this bastard prince and the young human girl Anya that conniving Baba Yaga gave Morozko to raise with his found family of cutthroat spirits stand a chance against the immortal sorcerer King Kaschei, who has trapped Anya's soul in the Deathless realms, in gardens of dead wives?
Anya is burgeoning with power, living a double life between Cold War Russia and D.C., and coming into her own as a witch to rival Baba Yaga. When her newfound love for Morozko is at stake, she will risk it all to follow the darkly tempting Kaschei to the Deathless lands, face the travails that put all Russia in peril - and save Morozko, as much as he saves her.
With epic love, sorcery, adventure, treachery, a Slavic inn for spirits, and plenty of blini warm by the fire, come read this daring journey, and find out if an immortal love can withstand death Himself!
When I was seven years old, my younger brother went into anaphylactic shock after sneaking a handful of peanuts.
Outside the emergency room, my mother slammed my head against the wall over and over, her face twisted with rage.
"If you had been watching him like you were supposed to be, this never would have happened! You should be the one with a ruptured stomach, not him!"
After that, whenever my brother so much as caught a cold, my mother forced me to eat spoiled leftovers as punishment.
I once prepared an elaborate feast. She flipped the entire table and made me crawl on the floor to lick it clean.
When I said I wanted to study culinary arts, she poured hot oil over my hands.
My father wanted to send me to vocational school to learn a trade, but my mother clutched my brother to her chest and wailed.
"She destroyed her brother's health! She owes him a lifetime of service!"
When I was fifteen, my brother's gluttony cost my father an important business deal. I took the blame without even being asked, and the furious client forced me to drink more than half a gallon of hard liquor.
By the time I was sent home with a bleeding stomach, my father had already scolded my brother. My mother took out her anger on me instead, slapping me so hard my ears rang and my vision went dark at the edges.
"You useless thing! You should’ve choked to death at that table! I get sick just looking at you!"
I coughed up black blood. From my pocket, I pulled out a piece of sour candy that had gone soft and sticky.
It was the only treat my mother had ever given me with a smile, back before my brother's allergic reaction.
I put the candy in my mouth and swallowed it down with the taste of stomach acid. The candy was so sour it made my throat burn.
Whatever came next, I just hoped I would not have to be my family’s garbage disposal again.
A priest has shown up at my first birthday party. He claims that I'm a cursed soul—that my presence will bring doom to those close to me, and my existence itself can snatch everyone's luck.
The only way to counter this is to give me up to an orphanage and let me live a life of poverty and suffering. Without a family, I'll be able to overcome my fate as a cursed soul.
Daddy has the priest cast out of our home immediately. Meanwhile, Mommy hugs me tightly.
"My son is the luckiest boy in the whole wide world!"
But everything has changed when my younger brother, Andy Lawson, has fallen off the 20th floor. His body is completely shattered from the fall.
I can only stand by the window uneasily. Fear is evident in my eyes as I wave my hands with all my might.
"It wasn't me! It really wasn't me!"
The wind that day is very strong, but it can never drown out Mommy's cries.
Daddy hoists me up and stuffs me into Andy's coffin. I keep latching onto the sides of the coffin to the point my fingers are all bloodied and trampled over. At the same time, I keep screaming for Mommy.
Mommy stares at me blankly at first. But her hollow gaze is soon filled with hatred.
"Why aren't you the one dead? That priest told us that you'll have to stay in the coffin for seven whole days and nights just to atone for your sins! Only then can Andy's soul rest in peace!
"This is your fate and your sin, Adam!"
The heavy lid slowly covers the coffin, soon sealing my hoarse cries and screams away.
A long time later, a few voices ring out amid the sorrowful melody played by the organ.
"Why is there a tiny gap in the coffin? Hurry up and nail it shut! We can't afford to have misfortune spread to us!"
When the final nail is bolted onto the lid, I close my eyes.
Mommy, Daddy, I'm no longer a cursed soul.
Caitlynn Nocella is human. She bleeds, she feels empathy for cute things like kittens in a teacup, she's optimistic and bubbly, and she forgives easily. Blaise Jacobson is a ghoul. A hot-head cocky and careless ghoul who feeds on human flesh once a fortnight and is blunt as hell. When Blaise saves Caitlynn from being killed by ghouls, he inadvertently drags her into a world of ghouls and humans combined. Suddenly everything is different and the ghouls she meet aren't exactly your typical 'monsters hiding in the closet'. Falling for a ghoul is hard, especially when you know how hot-headed and damaged he is, but maybe Caitlynn could change that, but at what cost?