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The Fairy Books of Andrew Lang: All Stories in the 12 Volumes

by Andrew Lang

Series: Andrew Lang's Fairy Books (Omnibus-complete)

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1301209,925 (4.43)3
Fairy tales are the oldest stories in the world. They were first made by adults who were childlike for their own amusement, and so they amuse children still, and also grown-up people who have not forgotten how they once were children. The stories in these books are borrowed from many countries; some are French, some German, some Russian, some Italian, some Scottish, some English, one Chinese. However much these nations differ about trifles, they all agree in liking fairy tales. The reason, no doubt, is that men were much like children in their minds long ago, long, long ago, and so before they took to writing newspapers, and sermons, and novels, and long poems, they told each other stories, such as you read in the fairy books. They believed that witches could turn people into beasts, that beasts could speak, that magic rings could make their owners invisible, and all the other wonders in the stories. Then, as the world became grown-up, the fairy tales which were not written down would have been quite forgotten but that the old grannies remembered them, and told them to the little grandchildren: and when they, in their turn, became grannies, they remembered them, nd told them also. In this way these tales are older than reading and writing, far older than printing. (Unexpurgated edition of Andrew Lang's Complete "Fairy Book" Series, including The Blue, Red, Green, Yellow, Pink, Grey, Violet, Crimson, Brown, Orange, Olive, and Lilac Fairy Books. "The Rose Fairy Book" is not included in this anthology, because the stories it contains can be found in the Grey, Brown, Pink, Lilac and Orange Fairy Books.)… (more)
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Want it. Read them all when I was little.
  picardyrose | May 9, 2007 |
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The original, individual volumes were published between 1889 and 1910.
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Fairy tales are the oldest stories in the world. They were first made by adults who were childlike for their own amusement, and so they amuse children still, and also grown-up people who have not forgotten how they once were children. The stories in these books are borrowed from many countries; some are French, some German, some Russian, some Italian, some Scottish, some English, one Chinese. However much these nations differ about trifles, they all agree in liking fairy tales. The reason, no doubt, is that men were much like children in their minds long ago, long, long ago, and so before they took to writing newspapers, and sermons, and novels, and long poems, they told each other stories, such as you read in the fairy books. They believed that witches could turn people into beasts, that beasts could speak, that magic rings could make their owners invisible, and all the other wonders in the stories. Then, as the world became grown-up, the fairy tales which were not written down would have been quite forgotten but that the old grannies remembered them, and told them to the little grandchildren: and when they, in their turn, became grannies, they remembered them, nd told them also. In this way these tales are older than reading and writing, far older than printing. (Unexpurgated edition of Andrew Lang's Complete "Fairy Book" Series, including The Blue, Red, Green, Yellow, Pink, Grey, Violet, Crimson, Brown, Orange, Olive, and Lilac Fairy Books. "The Rose Fairy Book" is not included in this anthology, because the stories it contains can be found in the Grey, Brown, Pink, Lilac and Orange Fairy Books.)

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Book description
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


The Rose Fairy Book is not included in this anthology, because the stories it contains can be found in the Grey, Brown, Pink, Lilac and Orange Fairy Books.

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 [retrieved 9/24/18 from Amazon.com]
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