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Cargando... The Iron Wolf and Other Stories (1980)por Richard Adams
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. 'What on earth are you doing now?' asked the dragon 'Got a spade?' replied Stan,. 'Just go and get it for me, will you?' 'Whatever for?' 'Well, you obviously haven't realised that you could save yourself all this work by simply digging up the stream and taking it to the cave. You're lucky to have an expert like me, you really are. Of course, I'll have to charge you for specialist advice. To digging up one stream, £1. To knowing how, £999. It's very cheap at that price, actually. The one I did for the King of Armenia cost a lot more than that, but it was a bigger one, of course. It runs through the palace gardens now. You might like to go and have a look at it some time.' I picked this book up for £1.99 at a charity shop due to its lovely dust jacket, which shows animals and birds peeking through leaves. Richard Adam retells 19 folk tales about animals from around the world. Each story is illustrated by a beautiful colour plate as well as black and white drawings, so it is lovely to look at. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
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With full-color illustrations, Adams re-creates nineteen folktales collected from around the world. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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Don't be fooled that this is a tale of sweet bunnies, though; some of the tales have explicit adult themes and any reading aloud to children should be done at the adult's discretion. There is a re-telling of the mice in the field of corn from The Mabinogion; the Moddey Dhoo from the Isle of Man (and with a reference to Adams himself, as he moved there after his writing success); a tale of the Esquimau (ibid) about the Crow who brings back daylight, and the Iron Wolf from Eastern European lands. And yet, change the telling a bit, and any of the tales can be transported to any culture that the teller wishes. The Prince who seeks eternal youth, finds a magic horse, and thereby breaks his parent's heart when he rides off; the Language of Animals that allows a good-hearted man to find comfort and some measure of wealth are all re-told as only Richard Adams can.
Adams says it best in his Introduction: he envisions the earth as the astronauts see it, rotating on its access, yet enclosed in a gossamer-like sphere (what he calls the "unbroken web") in which we live, and to which "the story-teller reaches up, grasps that part of the web which happens to be above his head at the moment and draws it down . . . to touch the earth. When he has told his story--its story-- he releases it and it springs back and continues in rotation." ( )