Friday, February 12, 2010

On Re-Reading William Steig's Book Shrek! by Jack Zipes


On Re-Reading William Steig's Book Shrek! by Jack Zipes is a recent post appearing today on the Tor.com blog. Actually, there have been quite a few Shrek posts on the Tor blog this month, so browse through if you are interested in reading more.

I'm always bemused/amused by readers looking for the "original" Shrek fairy tale, assuming that it is an old creation instead of a relatively recent invention of William Steig further reinterpreted by Dreamworks for the films. I know many are disappointed by the book after seeing the movie(s) first, but I have always found the book charming and Zipes explains why I and so many others do so.

This time I'm going to share the final paragraph since it talks about the fairy tale elements of Shrek in more detail. But as always, click through to read the entire piece.

This mock fairy tale plays with all the conventions of the traditional folk and fairy tale to provoke readers to consider the relative nature of evil and beauty. Instead of a handsome prince or a gifted third son, there is an outsider from the swamps, ugly and stinking, who wins a repulsive princess by overcoming fear of himself. The tale is obviously a parody of the Grimms’ “The Young Man Who Went Out in Search of Fear,” but is also more than that, for Steig levels the playing field for people considered to be despicable and evil. Shrek represents the outsider, the marginalized, the Other, who could be any of the oppressed minorities in America. He may even come from the streets of the Bronx, and the humor of the tale is clearly identifiable as New York Jewish humor. What was once a European folk tale has become, through Steig’s soft water color images and brazen irreverent language, a contemporary literary fairy tale that thrives on playfulness, topsy-turvy scenes, and skepticism. This is a fairy tale that radically explodes fairy tale expectations and fulfills them at the same time: the utopian hope for tolerance and difference is affirmed in an unlikely marriage sanctified by a dragon. The ogre and his wife will continue to frighten people, but they will be happy to do so in the name of relative morality that questions the bias of conventionality associated with evil.

Finally, if you are a Steig fan, don't miss A Handful of Beans: Six Fairy Tales Retold by Jeanne Steig with Illustrations by Wiliam Steig. It's a quirky little book. Here are some reviews for it:


Amazon.com Review:

What is A Handful of Beans? Six classics in one book: "Rumpelstiltskin," "Beauty and the Beast," "Hansel and Gretel," "Little Red Riding Hood," "The Frog Prince," and "Jack and the Beanstalk." As retold by Jeanne Steig, however, these well-loved tales acquire a certain modern vim. For example, the greedy King in Rumpelstiltskin is "as happy as a hog with a herring" to see all his straw spun into gold. The mother of Beanstalk Jack has "a dab of a garden, and an old cow called Blizzard, because she was as white as the milk she gave, except for a few spots to make her more interesting." Although the vocabulary is generally simple, Steig doesn't shy away from words like "sauntered" and "rapacious." And the Frog-who-would-be-Prince, among other characters, regularly breaks into rhyming couplets. Combined with 34 colorful, cartoony illustrations by William Steig, this gently ironic smattering of folktales will delight the grumpiest of readers. (Ages 3 to 6) --Richard Farr

From Publishers Weekly:

"A long time ago, when magic was more of an everyday matter...." begins Jeanne Steig's version of "The Frog Prince," an opener that typifies her sly irony and lilting language in this hand-sized volume. She and husband William Steig, who previously collaborated on Alpha Beta Chowder, deliver droll retellings and puckish new art for six familiar tales. Though youngsters may wish there were more illustrations to break up the sometimes text-laden pages, they won't soon forget William Steig's interpretation of Rumpelstiltskin, a "bizarre little man with a pickle-shaped nose and a lumpish body," stomping in outrage when the Queen guesses his name, or the snoring giant clutching his gold coins as Jack attempts to lift a few for his trip down the beanstalk. The artist whimsically refashions the well-known cast, exaggerating their fatal flaws or winning attributes, while placing them in everyday settings. Jeanne Steig also keeps the stories immediately recognizable by traveling the traditional plot lines, but she refreshes each of them by wryly rewarding the virtuous and punishing the villainous with equal panache. For example, in "Beauty and the Beast," the friends of Beauty's two superficial sisters wickedly predict the outcome of the duo's move from elegant townhouse to small country cottage: "Let them prance through the fields/ In chiffon and high heels,/ Raising arrogant brows/ At the goggle-eyed cows!" Similarly pithy verse appears throughout these fairy tales (Little Red Riding Hood and Hansel and Gretel also put in an appearance), each of which concludes with a fitting rhymed couplet. A handful of tales certain to please adults as much as children. All ages.

I will add a post script that while Sylvester and the Magic Pebble is perhaps Steig's most enduring book along with The Amazing Bone, although now are both overshadowed by Shrek, my personal favorite is Pete's a Pizza, a great storytime book, fairy tale or not.

The Legendary Talespinners



A new three part comics series featuring fairy tale characters and tropes is launching this month from Dynamite Entertainment. The first issue is on sale now or will be in a matter of days and the next two will be out in March and April respectively. From what I understand, a compendium of the three issues will be available in September (according to this link on Amazon at least), but single issues are available sooner, perhaps at your favorite comic book shop. (Images from Big Bang Theory enter my mind here.)


From the publisher:

If you enjoy "Fables", "Stuff of Legend" and other great new stories, you will enjoy Tales of the Legendary Talespinners!

From the dawn of creation there have been storytellers spinning timeless fables and folktales. Call them historians, poets, philosophers, or charlatans, it was their fanciful re-tellings of the age of wonder that kept children enwrapped in fantasy and immersed in imagination. But over the last two centuries something dark has been devouring the storytellers and even the stories themselves, leaving children with dulled imaginations and no will to believe in giant killers or wicked witches.

Abby was one of those children and is now a young woman who still lives only in the concrete reality of her professional ambitions. Raised by a mother who had no time for "childish pursuits," she grew up too fast and locked her fertile imagination away forever. But Abby's orderly world comes crashing down upon her when a crazy old man who believes himself to be the real Baron Munchausen leads her into a festering fantasy world facing villainous henchmen, zombified fairytale creatures, and the most unlikely wickedest witch of them all.

Dynamite Entertainment proudly presents an event that reshapes how we look at fables and the imagination! Written by James Kuhoric (Dead Irons/Freddy vs Jason vs Ash), illustrated by Grant Bond (Igor/Trick R Treat), and art directed by Nick Bradshaw (Danger Girl/Army of Darkness).

And since I haven't seen these and don't know when I will, if ever, here are links to some press and reviews around the web:

Kuhoric's Spin Zone by Cliff Biggers

Kuhoric Weaves "The Legendary TaleSpinners"

CBR Preview: LEGENDARY TALESPINNERS #1


For now, the series is available through the Dynamite website. The first two issues appear to have two different covers while the third only has one.

If anyone has seen these, please share reactions and thoughts...

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Bargain Shopping: Fairy Tale Fun Kit


For a limited time, the Fairy Tale Fun Kit from Dover Publications is 49% off on Amazon.com, making it $8.67.

Product Description:

A fairy tale world full of activities at a magical price!
• Over 130 stickers
• 71 mazes, crosswords, and search-a-words
• Fairy princess paper doll
• Favorite Fairy Tales by The Brothers Grimm
• 3 coloring books including a stained glass edition
• 12 bookmarks
• Invisible Fairy Tale Magic Picture Book
• Crayons

I'm a BIG fan of the stained glass coloring books by Dover as I've said in the past. I've written about some of these books before with posts on Fairy Tale Coloring Books and Fairy Tale Activity Books, but this is a great package price on a selection of titles from Dover. The kit is already a bargain if you want a few of these titles, but with it deeply discounted, it's an even better deal, just to overstate the obvious!

More Fairy Tale Nail Polish, Sort Of


Well, believe it or not, my posts on fairy tale related make-up are rather popular, so I had to share another fairy tale related nail polish collection that has been announced this past week.

OPI, who currently has the Alice in Wonderland collection available, has announced a limited edition collection of six colors to coincide with the release of Shrek Forever After this summer.


Here'a better image of the individual colors. These are rather surprising since they are not common nail polish colors--nary a pink or red--but they are definitely quirky just as Shrek is.


The 6 nail polishes are:

■ Funky Donkey
■ What’s With the Cattitude?
■ Rumple’s Wiggin
■ Who the Shrek Are You?
■ Ogre-the-Top Blue
■ Fiercely Fiona

These are slated for a summer release which means they will actually be available around April although an official release date hasn't been announced yet.

And as a PS for the topic, Sally Hansen nail polish has a new color called "Fairy Teal" which is available at most drug stores and big box stores like Target and Wal-Mart. It is obviously a teal color, a very pretty one, if you are adventurous with your nail polish choices, if you ever paint your nails at all that is.

(The OPI images and news of the collection came from Chic Profile.)

Fairy Tales and Romance Week: Weekend Reading

Today I thought I would share five of my favorite romantic fairy tale novels--these are not usually categorized as romance, but love is certainly a major part of the plotlines that use fairy tales as their inspiration. So if you're looking for a cozy read during the holiday weekend, especially if you are snowed in, consider reading or rereading these.

For the Valentine's Day holiday, these are all sweeter novels, not as gritty or harsh as some other excellent choices I'm not including here. They also all include my number one requirement for a good romantic story, the growth of a relationship into one of love and friendship. Each has unexpected elements and their usage of fairy tales is overt. All of them are safe for most reading ages, too, preteen and up. And hopefully this list is publishing early enough to find one of these at your favorite bookstore for the weekend, either for yourself or as a gift.


1. Beauty by Robin McKinley

It's always hard to choose a favorite McKinley novel, but since this was the first fairy tale novel I ever read, it remains a keystone in my experience. She uses Beauty and the Beast for her fairy tale, arguably one of the most romantic fairy tales depending on the interpretation.


2. Enchantment by Orson Scott Card

A departure from Card's usual fiction, I consider this one of his best novels and always hope he will be inspired to treat another fairy tale into a romance someday. His usage of Sleeping Beauty in modern and historical times as well as Russian folklore, especially Baba Yaga, is charming and engaging. It's one of the fairy tale novels I recommend regularly to friends and acquaintances who usually shun fairy tales.


3. The Blue Castle by L.M. Montgomery

It's hard to imagine a novel using Bluebeard themes to be romantic, but this one definitely is. I debated between this and Jane Eyre which also borrows from Bluebeard considerably, but this one is well-known by an author most famous for writing Anne of Green Gables and probably never appeared on your school reading list. This one is the most dated of the choices, of course, but it still holds up well and is one of Montgomery's better novels outside the Anne and Emily oeuvres.


4. Ella Enchanted by Gail Carson Levine

This is still one of my favorite Cinderella novels, hands down. I was surprised the first time I read it, prejudiced into thinking I couldn't enjoy it too much since it was Cinderella and I am usually weary and wary of straight Cinderella stories. But I was wrong and only too pleased to admit it. This was clever and fun and even more romantic than I usually expect from a novel safe for younger readers.


5. Book of a Thousand Days by Shannon Hale

One of my favorites by Hale, especially since she once again chose a lesser known fairy tale as her inspiration, this time Maid Maleen. True love, based on friendship, is one of the themes, but Hale deftly adds other elements in what could easily be a horrific tale.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Fairy Tales and Romance Week: Fairy Tales as Story Outlines

So this week is ending up to be more about romance novels and fairy tales, but since I've never focused on them before, I think it's a fair topic for the week either way.

During my research, I found Fairy Tales as Story Outlines by Jody Wallace, originally published in Love Notes: June 2002. It was republished online by Music City Romance Writers. In other words, Nashville Romance Writers, which I didn't even know existed although I live here.

Have you ever read a book and thought, "Why didn't the author try this?" or "If I were writing that, I'd change this and thus to make it better." While you can't revise another author's book and call it your own without getting immeasurable heckling and a lawsuit for plagiarism, there are indeed some basic plots which writers return to with great success. In the particular arena of romantic fiction, fairy tales often provide the framework for fascinating and original storylines — even if "Cinderella" has been retold ten thousand times.

The article is short and not very detailed, but it makes a few interesting points for beginning writers whether they want to write a fairy tale inspired romance or other genre.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Fairy Tales and Romance Week: All That Fairy Tale Nonsense

Today I'm sharing a link to another short but relevant article about fairy tales and the romance genre: All That Fairy Tale Nonsense by Chris Szego.

One of the many criticisms levelled at romance novels is that they’re a poor model for women when it comes to real-life relationships. All that fairy tale nonsense, detractors say, will make women want the wrong things from their partners. I could list a dozen things wrong with that assumption, but I’ll limit myself to three.

First, the blanket belief that, alone among the literate, romance readers believe everything they read is seriously insulting. Second, it demonstrates that said detractors don’t read much modern romance, or they’d know the kind of realism one can find therein. That’s annoying. Is divorce realistic, or abuse, or loss? Don’t worry: they’re covered. (Also, please consider what that means about the nature of ‘realism’).

This appeared on the Cultural Gutter, a site "updated Thursday afternoon with a new article about an artistic pursuit generally considered to be beneath consideration." A fun diversion if you're interested in some of their common topics: science fiction, romance, comics and movies.

The article also offers some examples of romance novels with Beauty and the Beast, Cinderella and Sleeping Beauty themes. It's short, but not sweet, although a fun read.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Fairy Tales and Romance Week: Fairy Tale Romance Novels

I have a rather hidden page on SurLaLune of fairy tale related romance novels at Fairy Tale Romances. It needs updating--I have more titles to add although I know I miss most of them. Romance is not my usual genre of choice, but I will peruse and research more titles on occasion. Sometimes dear readers like you also share titles.

Fairy Tale Romances was created as a landing place for all the category romance fiction that was almost impossible to learn more about or even track. (A good portion of romance fiction is published almost more like periodicals, one big print run that quickly goes out of print.) My list is broken down into categories of fairy tales, from Beauty and the Beast to Cinderella to Ugly Duckling.

I mention those three fairy tales specifically for I think they represent three of the most common if not the three most common tropes in romantic fiction, if we are very forgiving with defintions and terms. We have Beauty and the Beast: Women "taming" or "domesticating" men (or vice versa). Then there's Cinderella: Rags to riches (or riches to rags to riches) also simplified into marrying up the social and financial scale. Finally there's Ugly Duckling: Women blossoming into beautiful (and hyper sexually aware in the last few decades) adults after a period of awkwardness.

So, in other words, almost all romance novels do use fairy tale tropes to some degree. But I list only the ones that overtly use fairy tale themes, usually saluting them in their titles and descriptions. It would be nearly impossible to do more really considering the scope and breadth of the genre.

So explore the list and consider it. Also, if you are feeling like reading more lucid defense of romance fiction, I enjoyed Meg Cabot's defense of romance a few months ago on her blog which was also a response to the articles about dark YA literature. Read her here: Romance, Trauma Porn, and Brazil Dates! She includes links to more articles so I'll end here for today. (And, yes, I've linked to her blog before, but the link has changed. You can read my original post here: Article: Why children’s stories should have happy endings.)

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Fairy Tales and Romance Week: Jennifer Crusie

February is here which means Valentine's Day is not far away, a week from today actually. There aren't many words that are used so often in conjunction with romance as the phrase "fairy tale." So I felt I would be remiss to not offer up several posts about fairy tales and romance, using a variety of approaches to the topic. Or so I plan. We'll see how it goes.

To start off this week, I will focus on one of the most maligned genres in publishing, which is of course, romance. I myself have mixed feelings about the genre, from the straight pulp I find unreadable to much better writing from some writers than I have read in other genres, including and sometimes especially literary fiction.* I grow more and more hesitant to denigrate any genre over the years, especially a genre that is dismissed as "women's fiction" which in so many ways is what happens to fairy tales over time as they are dismissed as children's and or women's fiction and thus made third-class cousins to "more important" literature. With romance fiction still practically the only area of publishing that is managing to be recession proof, it merits more understanding and respect. (Harlequin after all started during the Great Depression and still thrives today as one of the publishers that appears to be adapting and experimenting with new technology faster than its competitors.)

So I am sharing a link to an article, This Is Not Your Mother’s Cinderella: The Romance Novel as Feminist Fairy Tale by Jennie Crusie. Crusie has been selling under the romance category as well as the almost defunct chick lit moniker. She has a definite apologist approach to discussing romance and fairy tales. I am not in complete agreement with everything she wrote in the article, after all my background is different and supports other theories, but I consider it one of the stronger articles, lucid, well-researched and definitely a solid source for inspiring further thought and discussion.

Times are grim for the Brothers Grimm: feminist revisionists keep messing with their fairy tales, trying to expunge misogynism while holding on to that elusive something that makes the tales vibrate in the reader’s mind, that aspect that makes the fairy tale, in Max Luthi’s words, “the universe in miniature” (25). And nowhere is that elusive something more sought after than in romance novels; a genre that relies heavily on the tradition of the tales even while requiring their revision for reader satisfaction. Of course, fairy tales bear a strong similarity to all genre fiction in their certainty about life; as Luthi defines them, fairy tales “aim for clarity, exactness, positiveness, and precision. There is no ‘if’ and no ‘perhaps’” (57). But the similarities between fairy tales and the romance genre in particular are deeper than the tidiness of the universes with which they deal. There is something in the fairy tale that resonates in the romance even though the tales must be extensively revised to satisfy their female audience.

This is just the first paragraph of a lengthy article, so please click through, read and come back here to discuss if you wish.


And while we're here, I will also share my favorite Crusie novel, Bet Me. A SurLaLune reader recommended it to me several years ago and on a whim I picked it up off a bargain table and was entertained for a late night's reading. It doesn't reinterpret any specific fairy tale, but plays with many of the motifs with humor and self-awareness that is charming. If you have no tolerance for romance, don't expect this one to change your attitude. If you enjoy occasional forays into the genre or are an avid fan, this one will entertain, even if you aren't a Crusie fan. (I admit I have tried more of hers, but this one is the only one I've ever kept on the shelf or reread again.)

Finally, I have a rather hidden page on SurLaLune of fairy tale related romance novels at Fairy Tale Romances. I will discuss it more tomorrow since I've already taken up so much of our time today.

*I admit, that if anything, I find myself prejudiced against literary fiction these days, finding much of it pretentious and unreadable.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Black History Month: African Folktales


Continuing Black History Month with African Folktales by Roger D. Abrahams, another Pantheon title that is a wonderful companion to the book I featured yesterday, African American Folktales: Stories from Black Traditions in the New World (Pantheon Fairy Tale and Folklore Library) by Roger D. Abrahams.

Product Description:

Nearly 100 stories from over 40 tribe-related myths of creation, tales of epic deeds, ghost stories and tales set in both the animal and human realms.


From Library Journal:

This volume sports a hefty 95 stories gleaned from the notes of the earliest missionaries on up to recent anthropological studies. Abrahams admits that reading the stories lacks the full impact of hearing them told aloud but contends that they can nonetheless still be enjoyed. The stories feature numerous illustrations.

Of course, with such a large continent, any book like this can only be considered a most basic overview. It is rare to find collections of folklore from specific African countries available in English so overviews are often the only resources available to casual and even somewhat enthusiastic readers. Still, this is one of the best of those available, especially for the price.

My specialty does not cover African folklore and fairy tales, but I have learned more in recent years with my research. There are also many titles available from the Golden Age of folklore studies, now available as scanned sources on Google Books or reprinted by enterprising small presses trying to preserve older books. I formatted three of them and published them on the SurLaLune main site, too. See them on the SurLaLune ebooks page. One especially is controversial since it uses the term Kaffir which has gained momentum as a derogatory term in modern times. I've received a few emails complaining about its appearance on SurLaLune where it appears as part of the historical record of folklore, not to represent or promote a mindset.

Golden Age of Folklore is my term, by the way, and for me covers most of the 1800s though about 1920, from Grimms to Jacobs and Lang with everyone in between. Some of it coincides with the Golden Age of Illustration. Just as so much European folklore is closely related, so is much of African folklore. Many tribes and cultural groups have similar stories. It is always interesting to see how some of these tales relate to European tales, they sometimes fit, but almost always on the slant.

This title by Abrahams is a better resource for comparison efforts since it is under the Pantheon imprint and thus follows somewhat of a series format.

Friday, February 5, 2010

Black History Month: African American Folktales: Stories from Black Traditions in the New World


In honor of Black History Month, I will share some great collections of African American and African folklore throughout the month. Today, I am featuring African American Folktales: Stories from Black Traditions in the New World (Pantheon Fairy Tale and Folklore Library) by Roger Abrahams.

Product Description from the publisher:

From the canefields of the ante-bellum South, the villages of the Caribbean islands, and the streets of contemporary inner cities, here are more than one hundred tales from an "incredibly rich and affirmative storytelling tradition" (Choice).

Full of life, wisdom, and humor, these tales range from the earthy comedy of tricksters to stories explaining how the world was created and got to be the way it is, to moral fables that tell of encounters between masters and slaves. They includes stories set down in travelers' reports and plantation journals from the early nineteenth century, tales gathered by collectors such as Joel Chandler Harris and Zora Neale Hurston, and narratives tape-recorded by Roger Abrahams himself during extensive expeditions throughout the American South and the Caribbean.

From the Back Cover

"Earthy and comedic...a rousing good read.... I suspect Mr. Abraham's book will be read a generation hence."
--New York Times Book Review

"Another masterful addition and accessible introduction to the captured myths of what the Mede calls 'God's Chiefdom'.... Sweeping across the continent...the juxtaposition of tribes and pacing of story lengths make for lively reading."
--Washington Post Book World

About the Author

Roger D. Abrahams is a former president of the American Folklore Society. Among his most recent books are African Folktales (also availabe in Pantheon paperback), After Africa (with John Szwed), and Singing the Master.

Abrahams is one of the pioneers of African American folklore scholarship in the past 30 years. This title was originally released in 1985 as Afro-American Folktales but was re-released in 1999 with the current title. Be aware that this, as well as many other Pantheon titles, are intended more for adult audiences than young children. The violence and some other issues although not graphic will merit discussion and are not unique to this ethnic group, but appear throughout folklore. (I include this warning after reading a negative reader review on the Amazon page.)

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Tales from a Finnish Tupa


Tales from a Finnish Tupa by James Cloyd Bowman & Margery Bianco, translated by Aili Kolehmainen was reprinted by the University of Minnesota Press late last year. I received a review copy and was impressed with this unexpected book. The tales are wonderful and are accompanied with numerous illustrations by Laura Bannon.

Publisher's description:

First published in 1936, this book presents tales of magic like "The Mouse Bride" and "Antti and the Wizard's Prophecy," droll stories such as "The Pig-Headed Wife," and fables from the collections of Eero Salmelainen and Iivo Härkönen, sharing Finnish wisdom on topics from the end of the world to how the Rabbit earned his self-respect. Featuring hand-rendered illustrations in full color, Tales from a Finnish Tupa is a folklore gem for all ages.

This book was originally intended for families with tales suitable for children but still interesting to adults. It's an outstanding collection of tales from a country that is rarely represented in English language anthologies of tales. It can be read for simple entertainment, but also provides some insight to a country's folklore for the armchair folklorist, too. There is no introduction, but a short appendix about Finnish folklore by Bowman is insightful. My favorite paragraph:

The heart of Finnish folk lore is magic. As Lafcadio Hearn
has so well said:

“The magic is not like anything else known by that name in European literature. The magic is entirely the magic of words. These ancient people believed in the existence of words, by the utterance of which anything might be accomplished. Instead of buying wood and hiring carpenters, you might build a house by uttering certain magical words. If you had no horse, and wanted to travel rapidly, you would make a horse for yourself out of bits of bark and old sticks by uttering over them certain magical words. But this was not all. Beings of intellect, men and women, whole armies of men, in fact, might be created in a moment by the utterance of these magical words.”

It's thus not a surprise that two-thirds of the book is comprised of magic tales. The other sections are droll tales and fables. One of my personal favorites was "The Girl Who Sought Her Nine Brothers" since it was distantly related to Six Swans types of tales, although in this one the sister is enchanted while she searches for her brothers who are never enchanted themselves.

Finally, one of the most interesting aspects of this title, from a trivia side, is that Margery Bianco is better known to most readers as Margery Willians, the author of The Velveteen Rabbit.

And here's the TABLE OF CONTENTS:

TALES OF MAGIC
The Ship That Sailed by Land and Sea
The Men of the Wallet
The Mouse Bride
Vaino and the Swan Princess
Hidden Laiva or The Golden Ship
Antti and the Wizard’s Prophecy
Lippo and Tapio
The Wooing of Seppo Ilmarinen
Jurma and the Sea God
Timo and the Princess Vendla
Severi and Vappu
Ei-Niin-Mita or No-So-What
The Girl Who Sought Her Nine Brothers
The Two Pine Cones
Kalle and the Wood Grouse
Niilo and the Wizard
Urho and Marja
Mielikki and Her Nine Sons
Leppä Pölkky and the Blue Cross
Liisa and the Prince

DROLL STORIES
The Pig-headed Wife
Finland’s Greatest Fisherman
Supid Peikko
The Wise Men of Holmola
Pekka and the Rogues

FABLES
The End of the World
The Rooster and the Hen
The Mouse that Turned Tailor
The Feast
Farmers Three
Why the Squirrel Lives in Trees
The Vain Bear
The Stupid Wolf
The Wisdom of the Rabbit
The Fox and the Rabbit
The Wily Fox
The Stupid Bear
The Song of the Fox
The Song of the Wolf
The Wolf and the Fox
The Bear Goes Fishing
The Fox as a Judge
The Rabbit’s Self-Respect

FINNISH FOLK LORE
FINNISH NAMES AND WORDS


For more information visit the publisher's book webpage or Amazon. And thanks to the press for sending a review copy. I might never have discovered this gem otherwise!