This is the complete set of Andrew Lang's Coloured Fairy Books:
The Blue Fairy Book The Red Fairy Book The Green Fairy Book The Yellow Fairy Book The Pink Fairy Book The Grey Fairy Book The Violet Fairy Book The Crimson Fairy Book The Scarlet Brown Fairy Book The Orange Fairy Book The Olive Fairy Book The Lilac Fairy Book
This version includes mini biographies of the major contributors, 400 black and white along with color illustrations which help the stories come alive. Several levels of table of contents which makes it easy to navigate through 437 chapters, 12 books and nearly 3,000 pages of content.
Audio links are included if you wish to hear the audio version of these books. Andrew Lang's Fairy Books — also known as Andrew Lang's "Coloured" Fairy Books or Andrew Lang's Fairy Books of Many Colors — are a series of twelve collections of fairy tales, published between 1889 and 1910. Each volume is distinguished by its own color. In all, 437 tales from a broad range of cultures and countries are presented.
Read the original stories of Beauty & the Beast, Cinderella, Rapunzel, Snow White, Sleeping Beauty, Little Red Riding Hood, and find out where the inspiration came for a lot of your favorite Disney movies.
Tales of the Scottish writer and anthropologist Andrew Lang include The Blue Fairy Book (1889).
Andrew Gabriel Lang, a prolific Scotsman of letters, contributed poetry, novels, literary criticism, and collected now best folklore.
The Young Scholar and Journalist Andrew Gabriel Lang, the son of the town clerk and the eldest of eight children, lived in Selkirk in the Scottish borderlands. The wild and beautiful landscape of childhood greatly affected the youth and inspired a lifelong love of the outdoors and a fascination with local folklore and history. Charles Edward Stuart and Robert I the Bruce surrounded him in the borders, a rich area in history. He later achieved his literary Short History of Scotland.
A gifted student and avid reader, Lang went to the prestigious Saint Andrews University, which now holds a lecture series in his honor every few years, and then to Balliol College, Oxford. He later published Oxford: Brief Historical and Descriptive Notes about the city in 1880.
Moving to London at the age of 31 years in 1875 as an already published poet, he started working as a journalist. His dry sense of humor, style, and huge array of interests made him a popular editor and columnist quickly for The Daily Post, Time magazine and Fortnightly Review. Whilst working in London, he met and married Leonora Blanche Alleyne Lang, his wife.
Interest in myths and folklore continued as he and Leonora traveled through France and Italy to hear local legends, from which came the most famous The Rainbow Fairy Books. In the late 19th century, interest in the native stories declined and very few persons recounting them for young readers. In fact, some educationalists attacked harmful magical stories in general to children. To challenge this notion, Lang first began collecting stories for the first of his colored volumes.
Lang gathered already recorded stories, while other folklorists collected stories directly from source. He used his time to collect a much greater breadth over the world from Jacob Grimm, his brother, Madame d'Aulnoy, and other less well sources. Lang also worked as the editor, often credited as its sole creator for his work despite the essential support of his wife, who transcribed and organised the translation of the text, to the success.
He published to wide acclaim. The beautiful illustrations and magic captivated the minds of children and adults alike. The success first allowed Lang and Leonora to carry on their research and in 1890 to publish a much larger print run of The Red Fairy Book, which drew on even more sources. Between 1889 and 1910, they published twelve collections, which, each with a different colored binding, collected, edited and translated a total of 437 stories. Lang, credited with reviving interest in folklore, more importantly revolutionized the Victorian view and inspired generations of parents to begin reading them to children once more.
Last Works Lang produced and at the same time continued a wide assortment of novels, literary criticism, articles, and poetry. As Anita Silvey, literary critic, however, noted, "The irony of Lang's life and work is that although he wrote for a profession... he is best recognized for the works he did not write," the folk stories that he collected.
This was a marathon read! It earns 3 stars for being an entertaining collection: two stars are lost for odd translation choices (some parts of stories were clearly omitted, perhaps for length, leading to weird gaps in the narrative) and for the repetition of some tales (not simply due to cultures having close versions of the same story, either). Also, as you would expect from a collection of fairy tales, there's plenty of racism, sexism, and misogyny to go around, so be forewarned if you pick this up!
I am glad I read all of Lang's fairy books, and if you decide to do the same, the kindle version will certainly be lighter than the paper one! Do note, though, that (as with many free kindle books) there are formatting problems that will make this collection difficult to navigate at times.
Major lessons: 1. Always trust the talking magic sheep. 2. Old women in the woods are always witches. As to whether they're good or bad: it's about 50-50 odds. 3. If you catch a fancy fish, throw it back. It may help you in the future. But do not, under any circumstances, make a wish on it. 4. Listen to your talking horse. It's smarter than you, and for pete's sake it's a talking horse. 5. Monkeys: Nature's Jerks. 6. Do not tell anyone that your animal husband is secretly a human, or vice versa. 7. If your parents tell you not to go near the spooky enchanted lake maybe DON'T GO NEAR THE SPOOKY ENCHANTED LAKE.
I rerated this series from a four to a five because at the time I read it, and it was sometime in my youth, the books were amazing to me.
I read and reread all 12 books in Andrew Lang's fairy book series in my exceedingly distant youth. I didn't actually realize there were a total of 12 books. I remembered them by their theme of different colors (which I recalled after reviewing the color themed mysteries about Travis McGee by John D. MacDonald). I remember my satisfaction with finding what seemed to be then a wealth of books in a series at the public library (1960s in Hawaii?). These were classic and completely accessible folk tales and fairy tales Lang collected from all over the world, most of which seemed to come from Europe. This was the precursor, perhaps, for my subsequent fascination with the Lord of the Rings trilogy. I always did like series of books, though, from Beverly Cleary and Eleanor Cameron to Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys, to Perry Mason, and then to Agatha Christie and beyond.
The publishing of this is truly dreadful. There is no complete table of contents, no clear divisions between stories, and the cover stock is very shabby. A basic rule of desktop publishing is to use similar graphic images throughout a piece. The cover and spine of this book look like stock clip art and a stock photo, I could have done better. I do not understand why they did not use one of the original illustrations used in the Andrew Lang series of books. To be honest, I only bought this because I wanted all the stories in one volume. Now, I wish I had sprung for buying each volume individually.
this series reminds me of the bookmobile that used to make its weekly stop at our school parking lot. i read one volume each week during the spring of my 6th grade school year. it was a fun way to pass away the afternoons.
because this collection is so comprehensive, the story plots/characters/resolutions heavily overlapped, but the illustrations are inviting enough to keep you engaged. can't say i had a favorite volume but my favorite color was pink...
Lang collected fairy tales from all over the world, some of which are well-known and favorites of mine growing up, others which were more obscure and new to me. The wealth of stories in these books is amazing. I've always loved fairy tales, and to be able to read them all in one place is wonderful. This will definitely be brought out on a regular basis so I can revisit favorite tales.
These are wonderful! Highly recommended for those who delight in folk tales, Grimm Classics, dark tales or inspired whimsy. Really these are worlds apart from modern fiction. If you are not a fan of literature but would like to be step in to these. Each book is packed with tales. Read a few on a plane ride or one a week to see where they take you. Enjoy!
The Blue Fairy Book (finished 05/03/10) I'd been recommended Lang's retold fairy tales for years, but never read them until now. They're wonderful! I don't know why I waited--I like them enough that now I read at least one tale every night before bed. His tone and language are comfortably familiar, but still carry the authority needed for these kinds of fairy tales. The only story I disliked was "Gulliver's Travels"--even Lang's much abridged retelling couldn't save that story for me, good as it was--but I don't count that personal bias against The Blue Fairy Book itself. I heartily recommend Lang's work to anyone who likes fairy tales, and anyone looking to get their feet wet!
A huge, fantastic collection of stories. Some of these are pretty short so it's good for a quick decompressing read before bed. The ebook format was cheap and this was a great buy. Highly recommended.
some short, and some not-so-short. Some familiar and some not-so-familiar fairy tales. Good character sketches and simple lessons. Entertaining short story-style reading.