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Wonder Tales: Six French Stories of Enchantment
Contributor(s): Warner, Marina (Editor), Adair, Gilbert (Translator), Ashbery, John (Translator)

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ISBN: 0195178211     ISBN-13: 9780195178210
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
OUR PRICE: $25.64  

Binding Type: Paperback - See All Available Formats & Editions
Published: November 2004
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Annotation: Especially for grown-ups, this is a selection of subversive, satirical, and sophisticated fairy tales full of polished wit and prose.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction | Fairy Tales, Folk Tales, Legends & Mythology
- Fiction | Anthologies (multiple Authors)
Dewey: FIC
LCCN: 2004007338
Physical Information: 0.64" H x 5.03" W x 8.1" L (0.62 lbs) 243 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - French
Features: Bibliography, Glossary, Illustrated, Price on Product, Table of Contents
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Once upon a time, in the Paris of Louis XIV, five ladies and one gentleman-- all of them aristocrats-- seized on the new enthusiasm for Mother Goose Stories and decided to write some of them down. Telling stories resourcefully and artfully was a key social grace, and when they recorded these
elegant narratives they consciously invented the modern fairy tale as we still know it today.
For this beautiful anthology of six masterpiece wonder tales, Marina Warner gathered five writers with a special sympathy for the French stories they render here in burnished, cunning and amusing English. The stories, The White Cat (translated by John Ashbery), The Subtle Princess (Gilbert
Adair), Bearskin and Starlight (Terence Cave), The Counterfeit Marquise (Ranjit Bolt), and The Great Green Worm (A.S. Byatt), are as unforgettable today as they were when first published centuries ago. Wonder is the key to the stories, and each tale abounds with transformation and magic.
Wonders can be benign (like the garden fruits that come when you whistle) or baneful (like the bad fairy Magotine's spells), producing dread and desire at the same time. But, fortunately, they almost always punish those who deserve it: tyrants, seducers, and other forces of malevolence.
Heroes and heroines are put to mischievous tests, and their quest for love is confounded when their objects of desire change into beasts or monsters. Still, true understanding and recognition of the person beneath the spell wins in the end, for after wonder comes consolation, and after strange
setbacks comes a happy ending. In Wonder Tales, a magical world awaits all who dare to enter.
 
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