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The Wisdom Bird: A Tale of Solomon and Sheba

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A Biblical tale of Solomon and Sheba.

Paperback

First published January 1, 2000

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23 people want to read

About the author

Sheldon Oberman

16 books2 followers

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Adrienne.
320 reviews
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April 24, 2009
King Solomon is the wisest man in the world. He is so wise that the wisest woman in the world, Queen Sheba, comes to Jerusalem to meet with him. Her one request: that he make a palace out of the beaks of birds. Through this difficult undertaking and the shrewdness of the colorful hoopoe, Solomon and Sheba learn a valuable lesson about promises.

Neil Waldman's bright illustrations are evocative of Middle Eastern and African art and work with Sheldon Oberman's read-aloud text make this mixing of folktales a memorable one for children and adults alike.
Profile Image for Hannah.
Author 6 books241 followers
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May 3, 2016
Interesting, if potentially confusing. Three fables/folktales thrown into one, taken from three very different traditions. This and books like Mufaro's Beautiful Daughters make me want to teach a class on how we make up folktales and also how we decide that things are ancient folktales when they seem exotic to us, even if they're actually made up by contemporary authors.

But I digress. Anyway. This is kind of weird, but it would make for a good story in a young classroom.
Profile Image for Jean-Marie.
974 reviews51 followers
August 27, 2016
What can the wisest man and woman in the world learn from a little hoopoe bird? "It is better to break a promise than to do something that is wrong."
Profile Image for Gretchen Oates.
757 reviews5 followers
December 13, 2018
3 1/2 Story of how the hoopoe bird got its crown of feathers as well as teaching the moral that it is better to break a promise than do something that is wrong.
Profile Image for Shoshanna.
1,438 reviews2 followers
February 2, 2026
A Tale of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheeba adapted from the Tanakh, Ashkenazi Jewish stories, Yemenite Jewish stories, and North African stories too! I also just read another picture book about King Solomon and the Queen of Sheeba and she is depicted as coming from Yemen, looking more Arabic. I guess we will probably never know what people looked like from the Tanakh!
Profile Image for Tarawyn Baxter.
270 reviews
June 8, 2020
I loved the artwork. Neil Waldman did a great job of incorporating Jewish, African, and bird imagery into nearly every page. And I liked the story. Even though Solomon had knowledge, he lacked wisdom, until the hoopoe bird made him realize the consequences of what he wanted to do.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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