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N**S
Good collection
A good collection of folktales from around the world.
M**N
I bought this book for Shishur Sevay, our home ...
I bought this book for Shishur Sevay, our home for lost and abandoned girls in Kolkata, India. The stories are interesting, thought provoking and educational for the girls of all ages, including those with disabilities. It vividly makes the rest of the world more reachable. The thread of the indigenous stories from different parts of the world resonates with Hinduism in which people and animals live in relation to each other.
G**S
A cultural expedition
Wonderful to read children's stories from around the world. Also well illustrated and organized as a collection. Showed many similarities between global cultures
⋆**⋆
A lovely collection of 52 folktales & legends from countries and cultures across the world.
The books is organised in terms of months. So there’s a mention of the month, and some special days/festivals/celebrations that occur in that month. For each special day, there are one-two stories. Many of these tales are linked to the event. For instance, Friendship Day comes with the Roman story of ‘Androcles and the Lion’, while Human Rights Day connects with the tale of ‘The Bell of Atri’.There are a couple of mythological tales, but most of the stories are folktales. As such, a few of them feel somewhat outdated due to their focus on the hackneyed ideas of princesses wanting a prince and girls looking for husbands/wanting babies and frogs wanting to be kissed and so on. They are entertaining, no doubt. A part of me feels that such content should be “retired” from children’s fiction. They have had a long enough run, and it is high time children’s fiction looks beyond old-fashioned thinking.The special days in the book are quite varied, ranging from festivals such as Easter, Diwali and Chinese New Year, to special days such as World Water Day and April Fools’ Day, to celebrations such as Midwinter and Harvest, to localised occasions such as Pirim, St. Swithin’s Day and Kwanzaa. A brief explanation of every single special event is provided at the end of the book. It would have been better had the details been provided in the same page as the name of the event appears on. The meaning would have come out clearly, and the related story would have also liked better in its theme.The illustrations are charming and definitely match the spirit of the book well.Angela McAllister is one of my favourite authors when it comes to children’s anthologies, but this wasn’t my favourite, though I did like it to a great extent.I read this book through my Amazon Prime subscription.
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