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38+ Works 2,637 Members 30 Reviews 9 Favorited

About the Author

Series

Works by Katharine Mary Briggs

British Folktales (1977) 433 copies, 3 reviews
The Fairies in Tradition and Literature (2002) 217 copies, 3 reviews
Folktales of England (1965) 147 copies, 2 reviews
Folk Tales of Britain: Narratives (1970) 131 copies, 2 reviews
Hobberdy Dick (1972) 117 copies, 3 reviews
Kate Crackernuts (1963) 74 copies
A Book of Fairies (1997) 26 copies, 3 reviews

Associated Works

Fantasy Stories (1994) — Contributor — 366 copies, 8 reviews
Folklore, Myths and Legends of Britain (1973) 257 copies, 3 reviews
Scottish Tales of Terror (1972) — Contributor — 19 copies
A Chaplet for Charlotte Yonge (1965) — Contributor — 7 copies

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Common Knowledge

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Reviews

32 reviews
This is a big, big book. Big in volume. Big in price. But big in value, too.

For some reason, the study of British folk tales was slow to catch on. Charles Perrault in France and the Grimms in Germany came long before Joseph Jacobs compiled the first serious collection of English folktales. This lack meant that there was never a collection as substantial as that of the Grimms. Katherine Briggs changed that. She gathered up just about everything in this multi-volume work, organizing the tales show more into categories and then arranging them by title within the categories.

That by itself would have been important enough, but she also classified them by motifs (based on the Aarne-Thompson motif set) and indexed them on this basis. And she listed parallel versions, allowing the user of the dictionary to find the materials not included in the book.

The result is one of the greatest references on folklore in the English language. If the works of Stith Thompson are the first thing anyone should acquire (and they probably are), this book has a very strong claim to be second. You'll quickly learn to work around the few minor defects it has.
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Briggs is apparently one of the major figures of folklore as an academic discipline, with a PhD from Oxford, and later president of the Folklore Society. The Personnell of Fairyland is an odd little volume. Even if it doesn’t quite match modern standards, the organization and ‘facticity’ of the book make it clear that this is a serious and scholarly collection of British fairy-stories. However, the subtitle is “for those who tell Stories to children,” and every third story or so show more has a darling little woodcut illustration.

As expected, this is a book of fairy tales. Each individual story is brief, and I recall the longest being no more than seven pages or so. The stories are divided into four major sections, heroic fairies who have great and mythical powers, brownies or little fairies who work in great swarms, tutelary families connected to a particular family or house, nature fairies, and finally assorted giants, witches, and monsters. Additionally, there’s a dictionary of different types of fairies. Generally, the stories involve humans interacting with fairies, sometimes tricking them but usually being tricked by the Fair Folk. There’s some deaths and maimings, although less than you’d see in unbowdlerized Grimm’s fairy tales. The worst thing that English fairies do in these stories is abandon humanity. Some of the tales are in plain English, some in dialect, without much pattern or explanation as to why.

As an introduction and basic reference, this is a decent enough introduction to English fairies. However, it entirely lacks context, and unless you are a particularly gifted reader, I can’t see reading these stories to children.
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I've decided to be generous and forgive the blatant error about the Isle of Man's 'black dogs' which she calls 'Mauthe Doog'. The correct term is 'Moddey Dhoo', and not even pronounced in a similar way to her spelling. This should have been corrected in editing, but considering how early on it way I nearly lost all hope for the correctness and accuracy of the rest of the book, but from my own research around the subjects of the book this was the only major error I could find.

That said, the show more book is a miniature treasure trove of information, and is excellent for introducing new folklore to the curious. The essays chosen were very brief but informative, and even though they were dry they were concise and easy to read.

It took me a while to get passed the errors about Manx folklore that I grew up learning, but I realise that they are not well known elsewhere in the world. On the one hand it could have been easily double checked, on the other it was nice to see our Island's culture being included as it is often neglected in books such as this.
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It is mid-seventeenth-century England. Hobberdy Dick, a hobgoblin whose charge it is to guard Widford Manor in the Cotswolds, watches unhappily as new tenants, a city merchant and his family, move in. What makes it even worse is the fact that they are Puritans. Hobberdy Dick knows that now the happy days of mumming and Maying, of Christmas dancing and fireside games are things of the past.
It seems a bleak outlook, until Dick sees hope for the future in Anne Seckar, the penniless cousin of show more the Culvers, and Joel, the merchant's eldest son, who loves the country and the old ways. show less

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Works
38
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2,637
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Rating
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Reviews
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ISBNs
103
Languages
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Favorited
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