Home  |  Search help  |  Classification Scheme   |   Leslie Shepard   |   Zotero

The Watkins book of English folktales / [edited by] Neil Philip ; foreword by Neil Gaiman.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: London : Watkins, 2022Edition: 2022 Watkins edDescription: xliii, 388 p. ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9781786787095
Other title:
  • Book of English folktales
  • English folktales
Uniform titles:
  • Penguin book of English folktales.
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: ebook version :: No titleSummary: "This is a golden treasury of over one hundred English folktales captured in the form they were first collected in past centuries. Read these classic tales as they would have been told when storytelling was a living art - when the audience believed in boggarts and hobgoblins, local witches and will-o'-the-wisps, ghosts and giants, cunning foxes and royal frogs. Find "Jack the Giantkiller", "Tom Tit Tot" and other quintessentially English favourites, alongside interesting borrowings, such as an English version of the Grimms' "Little Snow White" - as well as bedtime frighteners, including "Captain Murderer", as told to Charles Dickens by his childhood nurse. Neil Philip has provided a full introduction and source notes on each story that illustrate each tale's journey from mouth to page, and what has happened to them on the way. These tales rank among the finest English short stories of all time in their richness of metaphor and plot and their great verbal dash and daring"--Amazon.com.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Class number Materials specified Status Notes Date due Barcode
Books Books VWML Gift GO 40 (31) (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Reference only Gift from Derek Schofield. 21855

"First published in 1992 as The Penguin Book of English Folktales"--Title page verso.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

"This is a golden treasury of over one hundred English folktales captured in the form they were first collected in past centuries. Read these classic tales as they would have been told when storytelling was a living art - when the audience believed in boggarts and hobgoblins, local witches and will-o'-the-wisps, ghosts and giants, cunning foxes and royal frogs. Find "Jack the Giantkiller", "Tom Tit Tot" and other quintessentially English favourites, alongside interesting borrowings, such as an English version of the Grimms' "Little Snow White" - as well as bedtime frighteners, including "Captain Murderer", as told to Charles Dickens by his childhood nurse. Neil Philip has provided a full introduction and source notes on each story that illustrate each tale's journey from mouth to page, and what has happened to them on the way. These tales rank among the finest English short stories of all time in their richness of metaphor and plot and their great verbal dash and daring"--Amazon.com.

Share