Folklore; fairy tales; mythology, magic;supernatural; witches. Many of these tales and legends from Scotland were handed down by seanachies, or wandering story tellers; others, called sgeulachdan, were composed to celebrate a special event, such as a wedding or bethrothal, and recited before the assembled company.
Sorche Nic Leodhas (1898–1969) was born LeClaire Louise Gowans in Youngstown, Ohio. After the death of her first husband, she moved to New York and attended classes at Columbia University. Several years later, she met her second husband and became LeClaire Gowans Alger. She was a longtime librarian at the Carnegie Library in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where she also wrote children’s books. Shortly before she retired in 1966, she began publishing Scottish folktales and other stories under the pseudonym Sorche Nic Leodhas, Gaelic for Claire, daughter of Louis. In 1963, she received a Newbery Honor for Thistle and Thyme: Tales and Legends from Scotland. Alger continued to write and publish books until her death 1969.
As I begin reading the e-book I see that unfortunately the illustrations have been removed, which is awful as Evaline Ness is wonderful!
The introduction is interesting and helpful. It even gives pronunciation clues - I had not idea that Cèilidh is pronounced kay-lee!
The first story is fun, and I love that the strong-willed girl is also kind and so deserves to have her way and win her choice of husband. There's an unfortunate reference to a thieving Gypsy, but children are likely to overlook it, or families could discuss it.
So far I say that I would have loved this book when I was a child, and now I want to own it (or the omnibus) for the rereading opportunity and the illustrations!
The second story is v. short, a St. Cuddy pourquoi tale.
The third gives us a better look at gypsies, and includes revelations about the Sidh. And oh the mother's courage and cleverness!
I love the author's voice; she makes the stories sound so musical. Reading this aloud to children would be a joy.
I looked a bit at her author page here and see that I have actually read several other books by her before. Some more are avl. on OpenLibrary, too. ---- I'm enjoying it so much that I'm not making time to make notes here as I continue! I'm also going to put it on my 'to re-read' shelf. The stories are light and short, for a younger audience than many of the older Newbery books.
Themes are generally about the virtues of courage, kindness and honesty, as characters exhibiting those traits get rewarded. And in the story of the bee-keeper, it's the gypsies that actually help the young man. Often though the helper is an old woman, a sort of good witch. And often the hero is a woman. ---- Done. One of my favorite Newbery honors so far in this project. Just a delight.
Happily, this book was available on Kindle Unlimited. I only extended my subscription because there was a deal and I noticed this book was available. I need all the help I can get finding all these Newbery books.
One of my faves of the Newbery list. I love reading legends, myths, and fairytales so this was right up my alley.
I felt like these Scottish tales had a jauntiness to them missing from other European tales. I felt like they were never taking themselves too seriously. I love that.
I love the old Scottish tales and the way the sensible Scots outwit the supernatural elements in the world over and over again. I also like the lilting sense of poetry that comes with these stories. I dearly wish that I could have heard them as they were originally performed.
A Scottish friend tracked down this book for me -- he wants a copy for himself now. Evaline Ness' woodcut illustrations are absolutely wonderful! And gosh I love that Scottish burr..
A collection of fairy tales and legends from Scotland. Nicely told, and not surprisingly so; I have long appreciated Alger for her storytelling abilities.
These lovely tales were all told to the author and recreated in a lilting Gaelic feel. It would be a great read-aloud book. There is an intro that tells about Scottish tales and their history and where in Scotland each of these tales come from. There are fairy folk and a demon, wise and foolish lassies, brave and gentle laddies, and loving mothers. Each one is a wonderful story with a nugget of wisdom inside. I truly loved them.
I just loved this book. So different than anything I've read in forever. The illustrations were wonderful, the stories are fun and imaginative. The Introduction relevant. The book takes the reader to a time and place a million miles away. I just loved it. Even the copy I got from the library is an old, library bound, pre-ISBN book. A First Edition. Solid and reminiscent of my childhood. My only complaint is that it is way too short - I want MORE! I will seek this author out, for sure.
A really lovely collection of stories that have a musical quality to them due to the author's lilting writing style and her rich use of the Gaelic language. The essence of Scotland really comes through in every story and leaps off of every page. It was a wonderful reading experience to get swept up in the stories of strong-willed women and gentle, kind-hearted men. I especially loved the tale of the beekeeper and the bewitched hare.
10 folktales from Scotland; none of which I had ever read before. And none of the tales are Scottish versions of well-known stories like Cinderella, etc. Well-written in a flowing style, such as a story teller would use in an oral telling. With black and white illustrations by Caldecott Award winner Evaline Ness. The stories all were romantic or adventurous, and it was refreshing to read stories I had not encountered a hundred times before.
It is a collection of ten Scottish folktales. Unlike Grimm, most of them are very light and have happy endings. The author says in a note at the beginning that these tales would have been told at weddings and other special occasions. My favorite was about a girl who has a run in with a Kelpie.
These were all tales I had never read before. All of the tales were really fun. The edition I checked out on Libby did not show the illustrations which was a little sad to me, but I also enjoyed trying to imagine how I would illustrate some of these stories. I loved The Stolen Bairn and the Sidh It has beautiful imagery in the words, and feels truly enchanting. The premise of that one is a mother is somehow separated from her baby, and the fairies come and take the child. The mother then makes a cloak of white feathers and a harp from ivory bones to trade for entrance into the fairy kingdom and to trade for her baby. I also really liked The Lass who went out at the Cry of Dawn The elder sister is stolen away by an evil magician and the younger sister goes on a quest to rescue her. The strangers she helps end up giving her advice and are also under the evil magician's enchantment. The beekeeper and the Bewitched Hare A beekeeper with the help of his bees is able to free the enchanted hare from the witch who cursed her. The Fisherlad and the Mermaid's Ring A fisherman confesses his love and is rejected, he hides away in a removed cove from embarrassment. Catches a mermaid and the mermaid says she will help him marry his one true love if he can wait but one more year I'll admit while reading this tale I kept picturing Ross and Demelza Poldark from the 2015 BBC series. so obviously I also enjoyed this story as well.
It's good to reconnect with this classic book of tales and legends from Scotland. Sorche Nic Leodhas (Leclaire Alger) has brought together eighteen stories from the oral tradition. Included are tales of the sidhe, selkies, kelpies, bogles, and more. My favorites are "The Woman Who Flummoxed the Fairies" and "The Fisherlad and the Mermaid's Ring." but all are worth telling again and again. Note: The edition I read includes the ten tales originally in Thistle and Thyme, plus eight tales originally in Heather and Broom.
4 stars. This short collection of Scottish tales is delightfully enjoyable and surprisingly cheerful. For the most part they're about brave and clever people who outwit rather than out muscle their antagonists. The vocabulary may be a bit challenging and the book really needs a glossary for the Scottish words. I really regret that the illustrations have been omitted from the e-book. I recommend this to anyone who likes myths, legends, and fairy tales. I read this for my 2020 Reading Challenge (Popsugar 2019 "inspired by myth, legends, folklore") and my Newbery Challenge (Honor 1963).
This excellent collection--I enjoyed all ten tales and legends--was a finalist for the Newbery Medal and won a Lewis Carroll Shelf Award in 1963. Stories include witches and wizards, fairies and changelings, monks and pirates, bairns and lasses the bonniest you'll ever meet. The Scottish Gaelic dialect is super fun to read aloud.
This is an entertaining group of tales - I appreciated the introductions which defined the variety of different types of tales, how they were given, where they would be performed, etc. My three favorite tales were "The Bride Who Out Talked the Water Kelpie", The Bee Keeper and the Bewitched Hare" and "The Fisherlad and the Mermaid's Ring".
Wonderful, consistent voice and tone throughout, hard to achieve in short story collections. The author also did a good job of picking stories that seemed new and unique, not just "the Scottish version of this kind of folktale." I especially loved the mermaid story.
It's been a very long time since I read or heard any myths and this small book was very enjoyable indeed. I could hear my grandfather's voice reciting them, with his Bathgate accent that never changed during the 40-odd years he lived in Detroit.
I really enjoyed reading the short stories within this volume. I can best describe them as Scottish fairytales, although not all of them involve fairies or the Sidhe. I would recommend this book as one to read for fun to younger kids.
I enjoyed reading this delightfully amusing collection of stories. I found all the stories fascinating and can not choose one as a favorite. There are 10 stories total.
A nice dip into the Scottidh culture through this small collection of tales and legends. I can't speak intelligently on the translation but I still felt a lot of the direct and culture come through and appreciated it.
This is a book of stories from the Scottish oral storytelling tradition; the author provides an introduction that frames how the stories were usually heard and passed on, and then recounts them in the storyteller's voice, which made them very entertaining and a pleasant winter read.