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Chinese Fairy Tales and Fantasies (Pantheon Fairy Tale and Folklore Library)

Chinese Fairy Tales and Fantasies (Pantheon Fairy Tale and Folklore Library) at Amazon.com


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ISBN: 0394739949 - Chinese Fairy Tales and Fantasies (Pantheon Fairy Tale and Folklore Library)  
Title:Chinese Fairy Tales and Fantasies (Pantheon Fairy Tale and Folklore Library)
Author:Moss Roberts
Publisher:Pantheon
Type:Book / Paperback
Publication Date:12 July, 1980
ISBN / ISBN-13:0394739949  /  9780394739946
List Price:$16.00
You Save:$5.12
Amazon Price:$10.88

* This book is also available, brand-new, from 3rd-party marketplace sellers at Amazon.com, from $9.55.



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Editorial Review / Publisher's Information:

Product Description
This fresh and elegant translation of 100 tales from 25 centuries of Chinese literature opens up a magical world far from our customary haunts. Illustrated with woodcuts.

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Customer Reviews:

 • Enjoyable And Mysterious
10 January, 2008

Don't let the title's 'Fairy Tales' give you the wrong expectation. A few stories here (such as "Girl in Green") do resemble Western fairy tales, with supernatural beings, animal transformations, and unknowing mortals enchanted by these beings or enmeshed in their mysterious affairs. Other stories (including "The Tiger Behind the Fox") would be at home among Aesop's fables - stories acted out by anthropomorphized animals, showing some moral or insight into human nature. Yet others (like Chuang Tzu's familiar "Butterfly Dreams") extract pithy parables from the classic books of wisdom. Most of these stories are very short - some contain only one paragraph, few extend beyond their second page. This isn't a children's book, even if kids might like a few of the stories. It is a fascinating and varied glimpse at many of the ages and traditions that make up Chinese culture. It also shows how myths can grow up in very different ways than they did in the West; that sense of the familiar-but-not makes up a big part of this books quirky charm. -- wiredweird

- Reviewed by customer ID: AUTBHG6070SL4

 • There Are Better Collections
20 March, 2008

As a devotee of Chinese folkore and literature I was disappointed by this collection. The retellings were wooden and lacked the graceful flow that all well told fairy & folk tales should possess. Many of the stories are taken from Pu Songling's "Strange Tales from a Chinese Studio." Moreover children and parents may find some of the stories in this collection both morbid and cruel and not of a "cuddly" nature. I would encourage both adults and children to look elsewhere for a better, more approachable collection from the rich Chinese tradition of imagination.

- Reviewed by customer ID: AQ4AFUZIVRYSI

 • Pretty Good
08 October, 2004

I actually thought this book was pretty good. Though, the illustrations are very simple. The stories are short and simple, but they are fun to read. I liked it.

- Reviewed by customer ID: A9BUJAVZ8WTBI

 • Unique And Special
12 August, 2006

I just had to come in here and pen this to counterbalance the so-and-so who assigned this opus but a single star. The stories are often short, but that should not detract from them, nor should the simplicity of some. They are, after all, CHINESE. The culture is different; the values are different; the symbology is different. I found the collection delightfully refreshing, and I particularly found some of the pieces extremely funny. This book is a definite keeper that the reader will remember for some time--both for its difference from the common European traditions and for its similarities thereto.

- Reviewed by customer ID: A30YM91ARQDGN7

 • Pg-13
07 January, 2007

I just got this book and I'm writing on my experience last night, when I began reading a story to my daughter. In the course of three pages, a woman was cut up "inch by inch starting at the feet"; a man's head was cut off; in hell he was tortured with "molten bronze, the iron rod, pounding, grinding, the fire pit, the boiling cauldron, the hill of knives, the forest of swords"; as further punishment he was reborn as female; as a child, she fell into a fire and could get "no relief from the pain"; later her husband smashes her baby's head against a rock. Browsing more today I haven't found anything approaching that level of violence, just my bad luck perhaps. The stories are fascinating, and the introduction is a wonderful explanation for Taoism and the tension with Confusianism that is reflected in this anthology.

- Reviewed by customer ID: AFSJ4ZJNBYV7C


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