Standout scenes include a Chinese dragon with an unfolding crepe paper body and a vampire whose coffin lid lifts as he awakens. Once again, Reinhart and Sabuda have created an offering distinguished by clever details, superb execution, and a sense of wonder.
--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
There's Medusa in all her reptilian glory and hypnotic eyes representing Monsters of Antiquity; a ferocious green dragon symbolizing Terrible Serpents of the West; and a show-stopping red dragon snaking its circuitous body, partially composed of tissue paper disks, across the page embodying the Majesty of Eastern Dragons.... Marvels of paper engineering.
--The Horn Book (starred review)
A spectacular climax to the authors' Encyclopedia Mythologica, offering a world-spanning gallery of ancient and modern monsters portrayed in thrilling 3-D...another tour de force of paper engineering.
--Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
In addition to showing readers that fear-invokers are as old as civilization itself, the well-written text makes interesting connections between monsters and aspects of modern-day life and culture... Another winner in a delightful series that combines solid content, handsome artwork, and a wow-inspiring presentation.
--School Library Journal (starred review)
Matthew Reinhart is the cocreator of the Encyclopedia Prehistorica and Encyclopedia Mythologica series. He has also created many other award-winning pop-up books, including
Mommy? by Maurice Sendak and Arthur Yorinks and
Star Wars: A Pop-up Guide to the Universe. He lives in New York City.
Robert Sabuda is the cocreator of the Encyclopedia Prehistorica and Encyclopedia Mythologica books. He is also the creator of many other best-selling pop-up books, including
America the Beautiful, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, and
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. He lives in New York City.