by Khoa Le
Contents
Introduction
Gerda and the Snow Queen
Hua Mulan, the Noble Warrior
Heidi’s New Adventures
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
The Tale of Athena’s Great Contest
Dorothy’s Adventure in Oz
Hinemoa’s Great Swim
Chimidyue and the Butterfly
The Fountain, the Oven,and the Goddess
The Tale of Odette, the Swan Maiden
Lykke, the Little Mermaid
Guimara, the Giant Princess
The Maiden and the Falcon
Céline, Kitchen Queen
Princess Kaguya’s Great Adventure
Introduction
Dear reader, do you like adventures? You do? Oh, good. Because the book you are holding is absolutely crammed full, bursting at the seams with ADVENTURES. Lots of people think that an adventure is something you have to go far, far away to experience—that you have to trudge through a wilderness, climb a mountain, defeat a bad guy, and escape death at least once before breakfast. But the truth is that an adventure can happen anywhere, if you know how to have one.
So, here is a handy guide to having an adventure:
1. Find your mission
Have you spotted someone who needs your help? Or is there a new place you want to explore? Or perhaps an important object you want to retrieve? Maybe you’ve got lost and need to find your way home? Congratulations, you’ve just found your mission and you are ready for Step Two.
2. Take the first step
This sounds easy. It’s just lifting your foot up and putting it down again, after all! But the first step is the most important—and the most difficult. If you’ve chosen to have your adventure, you might be ready to bound out of the door with a pack full of provisions. But otherwise, it might take a lot of bravery to begin. Which brings us onto Step Three …
3. Find your bravery
Everyone knows that you must be brave to have an adventure. But not everyone knows that we all have a bit of bravery inside of us. That’s right, absolutely everyone! And there is nothing like an adventure to bring out your courage, whether it’s needed to stand up to bullies, to fight a terrifying monster, or to travel somewhere new. Being brave doesn’t mean you never get afraid. It means that you carry on even when you are afraid!
The girls in these stories are from different places all over the world. Their lives and situations are diverse, but they all have the heart and determination to stand up for what’s right—for themselves and others.
So, are you ready to battle a Snow Queen with loyal young Gerda? How about a journey from space alongside curious Princess Kaguya? Or perhaps you would rather fight an invading army alongside fierce Hua Mulan? This book will take you from an Alpine village, across the deep ocean, through the topsy-turvy world of Wonderland, up through the sky to Oz, and then spin you back through the forests of Russia and many other fantastic places besides.
Grab any provisions you need. (All adventures require a snack or two!) Next, find yourself somewhere comfortable and quiet. (Being interrupted is no good for adventures.) Now, it’s time to become friends with these wonderful, intrepid girls. Live their stories with them and hold them close. Then, maybe one day, you will be ready to have a thrilling adventure of your own.
Gerda and the Snow Queen
Adapted from The Snow Queen by Hans Christian Andersen
Gerda and Kai were the very best of friends. They lived next door to each other in a town in Denmark. Their bedroom windows were opposite each other, and so close that they could visit each other by climbing straight across. They loved to play in their window-box gardens. Together, they had grown several beautiful red roses. They would even hear their bedtime stories together. One snowy night, they were snuggled down, watching huge snowflakes fall outside. Kai’s grandmother was telling them a story. She told them that sometimes, the snowflakes weren’t just snowflakes. Sometimes they were Snow Bees.
Just like all other bees, Snow Bees had a queen. She looked like a human queen, crowned with ice. She ruled the snowy winters. Kai’s grandmother said if they looked where the snowflakes clustered the most, they would find the Snow Queen.
The next day, Kai and Gerda played in the snow, as usual. They took their sleds down to the town square and waited for passing sleighs to hook them onto, so that they could have a fast ride along the road. It was great fun! At dusk, they knew it was time to go home. But while Gerda went straight indoors for some of her grandfather’s delicious hot cocoa, Kai pretended he was going inside, but then crept back to the square.
Just one more ride and then I’ll go home, he promised himself.
The town square was empty now, lit only by the moon and the street lanterns. It was so quiet, Kai was about to give up and go home when a pair of great white polar bears came whizzing into the square in a flurry of snowflakes, pulling a big white sleigh driven by a lady in a white fur coat.
Kai couldn’t believe his luck as he hooked his sled on. The sleigh was so fast and it was a thrilling ride through the slippery streets. Before Kai knew it, they were outside the town and the sleigh stopped.
The lady’s face appeared over the side of the sleigh, surrounded by floating snowflakes. She was very beautiful and wearing a crown of golden shards. “Did you enjoy your ride?” she asked. Her voice sounded exactly like the tinkling of icicles falling off a roof.
Kai nodded. The lady smiled. It was the coldest smile Kai had ever seen—but also the most beautiful. “Do you know who I am?”
Kai suddenly remembered the description from Grandmother’s story and fear gripped his heart. “You’re—you’re the Snow Queen!” he gasped.
Her smile widened, like a crack opening in a frozen lake and the Snow Bees buzzed around her. “That’s right.”
The Snow Queen kissed Kai once on the forehead so he would not feel the cold. Then she kissed him again so that he forgot about his family and friends. Kai took her hand and climbed into the sleigh. Away they rode, leaving Kai’s home, and all those who knew and loved him, far behind.
The next morning, Gerda woke to the news that Kai was missing. She raced outside to look for him in all their usual spots, but Kai was nowhere to be found. As she passed the nearby river, a little boat floated toward her, stopping right by her on the bank.
Gerda gasped. “Mr. River, do you know where Kai is?”
The river gurgled and bubbled and the boat bumped the bank again, so Gerda climbed in. “Please take me to him!”
The river carried her far and fast, through small towns and big cities and dense forest and snowy hills. She could not steer the boat to the side of the river to stop. Soon Gerda was farther away from home than she had ever been. After sailing for nearly a whole day, the boat gently pulled over in the most peculiar spot. The bank it bumped up against this time was not covered in snow, but lush, green grass. As Gerda stepped out of the boat, she felt warm sunshine beating down on her head.
She found herself in the garden of the Sorceress of Summer. It was the most beautiful, bloom-filled paradise and the Sorceress herself was a friendly, twinkly, older lady, dressed in flowers from head to toe.
She welcomed Gerda warmly and offered her food and drink. As Gerda went into the Sorceress’s cottage, she paused to admire a bush of red roses.
“These remind me of my best friend, Kai,” Gerda said. “I’m actually here to look for him—have you seen him?”
“I’m afraid not,” said the Sorceress.
As Gerda skippe
d inside, the Sorceress waved her hands and every rose bush in the garden sank beneath the ground. The Sorceress was very lonely and now that Gerda was here, she didn’t want her to leave. In the house, she fed Gerda delicious treats, all filled with a small amount of Forgetfulness Potion, so as Gerda ate, she soon forgot her family, her town, and Kai. She thought she had always lived with the Sorceress.
Gerda stayed for a very long time, playing in the sunshine for days on end. Then, one day she saw a red rose on the Sorceress’s hat. It was just like the roses Kai’s family had grown, and everything came rushing back to her! She didn’t say anything to the Sorceress, but once Gerda was alone again, she began to cry. She couldn’t believe she had forgotten Kai when he needed her help.
Her tears fell onto the warm earth. A moment later, one of the rose bushes the Sorceress had hidden pushed up through the earth.
“Dear Gerda, why are you crying?” the rose bush asked, with a small voice like rustling petals.
“Because I have not found my friend Kai, and now I fear he might be dead,” Gerda sobbed.
“Do not despair,” the rose bush said. “I have been under the earth all of this time and I could see all of the dead. Kai was not there. Wherever he is, he isn’t dead.”
“Oh dear rose bush, I could hug you!” Gerda cried.
“Better not, my thorns will prick you,” the rose bush chuckled. “But be careful of our mistress, the Sorceress. She hid me so you would forget Kai and she enchanted you to make you forget your home. Now go, find your friend!”
Gerda ran for it, straight out of the garden. She jumped over the fence and ran and ran until she could go no farther. She dropped to the ground in a small woodland and looked around her for the first time. She noticed, with a jolt, that it was nearly winter again—she had been in the Sorceress’s garden for a whole year!
Two white doves swooped down and dropped a warm, red cloak in front of her. “We have news for you, Gerda,” cooed the doves. “We know you are looking for Kai and we saw him the night he disappeared.”
Gerda gasped in excitement. “You did?”
The doves told her that they had seen the Snow Queen kiss Kai so he would forget Gerda and his home, and how she had taken him away to Lapland.
“Lapland,” Gerda whispered to herself. She had heard tales of the northern land, but she knew it was very far away. “I’ll never get there,” she said, sadly.
At that moment, a reindeer came trotting through the trees.
“Bae is from Lapland,” explained the doves. “He can take you there.”
“Oh, thank you for helping me!” Gerda cried.
She climbed onto Bae’s back and the reindeer set off at a gallop.
It was a long and hard journey through the cold and the thick snow, but eventually they reached the palace of the Snow Queen. As they approached the gates, the Snow Bees saw them and attacked in a swarm. It was the strongest, coldest snowstorm that Gerda had ever known.
She and Bae battled through and emerged next to a lake of gleaming ice. In the middle of the lake sat the Snow Queen, on a jagged frozen throne. In front of her, crouched on the ice, looking blue with cold—was Kai!
“For the last time, Kai,” the Snow Queen said. “If you can solve that puzzle and find the word I am thinking of, I will let you go home. Otherwise you must stay with me forever.”
Kai was staring at shards of ice with letters scratched onto them. He kept pushing them around to rearrange them but he looked totally stumped.
Gerda ran up to him. “Kai! It’s me, Gerda! I’ve come to take you home!” She kissed him on the face and hugged him.
Gerda’s warm kiss melted the magic of the Snow Queen’s kisses and Kai blinked at her. “Gerda? GERDA!” He stood up and hugged his best friend as hard as he could. Gerda took his hands and they spun around in circles, so happy to see one another. As they whirled around, they whipped up the ice shards Kai had been trying to rearrange.
“How DARE you come to my palace!” the Snow Queen thundered. “He will not be coming with you, for he cannot solve the puzzle.”
Gerda looked down to see that the ice splinters had rearranged themselves into a word. “Oh really?” she retorted. “Is the word you were thinking of ‘ETERNITY’?”
The Snow Queen roared with fury, for that was the word. Her spell over Kai was broken and the two friends and Bae raced out of the palace.
It was a long journey home. When they arrived back in the town, it was summer and their families had thought they were lost forever. Kai and Gerda were both older than when they had left, but their friendship was stronger than ever.
“Gerda never gave up on me,” Kai told everyone.
Gerda smiled back at him. “And I never will.”
Hua Mulan, the Noble Warrior
Adapted from Ballad of Mulan, by Guo Maoqian
Once, long ago in China, there lived a young girl called Hua Mulan. She lived with her parents and her baby brother. Mulan always did her best to be a good daughter and loved her family dearly.
Mulan lived in a small kingdom, ruled by a kind king. This kingdom, and several others, were all ruled over by the Emperor of China. One day, a letter was sent to every household to say that each family would have to send a man to war. If they had a son the right age, he would be selected. Otherwise, the father would be taken.
Mulan’s father read the letter aloud with a shaking hand.
As Mulan listened, worries started to swirl in her mind, for her father had not been well recently. She knew he would barely be able to lift a sword, let alone fight.
Mulan knelt in front of him and clasped his hands in hers. “Father, you are not well. I will speak to the army and I’m sure they will release you from this.”
“Thank you, dear. I hope you are right,” said her father, closing his eyes in relief.
Mulan knew that the army wouldn’t be kind as she had said to her father. She had heard many tales of old or sick men being dragged away to war and she was determined to save her father from that fate.
Two days later, Mulan arose before dawn. She dressed like a boy, made her hair look like a boy’s, and picked up her father’s sword, a traditional weapon called a dao. Then she slipped down to the village to wait.
Before too long, an army rounded the corner, led by a king and several generals on horseback. But it was not Mulan’s own king who rode at the head. It was Dou Jiane, the king of the next-door kingdom. He had already collected all of his men and was riding to meet the Emperor.
Riding at his side was his daughter, Xianniang. She was most unusual in China, as she was a warrior herself. She was as strong and fierce as any man. When she saw Mulan standing at the roadside, she pointed. “Look, father, another soldier.”
Her father waved this away. “We have all of our men. Leave him here for his own king.”
Xianniang was looking Mulan up and down very carefully.
Does she see through my disguise? Mulan worried.
Finally, Xianniang spoke. “This soldier looks sharp and healthy. I want to take him for our own army. We can let the Emperor know he is with us.”
Dou Jiane shrugged and agreed, so Mulan ran to join the end of the marching line of troops.
They marched for the whole day. Mulan kept her head down and didn’t speak to the men on either side of her. As the sun set, they halted to make camp.
Just as Mulan was worrying about where she would sleep and whether her secret would be discovered, Xianniang appeared at her shoulder. “Come with me, young soldier.”
Inside Xianniang’s personal tent, the warrior princess stared at Mulan once again. “Soldier, have you fought before?”
“No,” Mulan admitted, truthfully.
“Have you ridden?” Xianniang asked, sharply.
“No.”
“Why have you come to fight?”
Mu
lan tried to make her voice deep. “My father is sick.”
Xianniang leaned in close, her eyes raking Mulan’s face. “Do you have other siblings?”
“A baby brother.”
“And do you like being a big sister?”
“I do,” said Mulan. A moment later, her mouth flew to her hand in horror.
“HAH!” cried Xianniang, “I knew it! You are like me, a warrior woman! Don’t worry, I will keep your secret.”
“I am not a warrior woman,” Mulan said. “I was being truthful when I said I have never fought.”
Xianniang’s eyes gleamed. “Well, then, I will train you myself. We have two weeks until we meet the enemy.”
From that moment on, Xianniang and Mulan were like sisters. Xianniang trained Mulan hard, every day. Mulan grew strong. She learned to fight with a dao and to ride at top speed. Soon, she was holding her own when sparring with the other soldiers. Then, she began to beat them.
The day came when it was their turn to fight the enemy. Mulan’s heart was in her mouth as they arrived at the battlefield and she saw the northern invaders lined up on the next hilltop, as far as she could see.
The battle was long and hard. Mulan fought without pause, back to back with Xianniang, sometimes fighting ten men at once between them. The girls used their smaller size to their advantage, weaving and ducking around the burly men.
Finally, they pushed the enemy soldiers back and back until a halt was called when the sun went down. Mulan and Xianniang returned to their camp, pleased with their day’s work.
Several days the same as the first followed. The battles were long and hard, but Dou Jiane’s army was winning and Mulan and Xianniang became famous as its best warriors.
Then, one night as Mulan lay sleeping, she was awoken by loud shouts of anger. Her hand flew to her dao and she jumped up, ready to fight, Xianniang at her side.