
Andy Jones (2) (1948–)
Author of The Queen of Paradise's Garden
For other authors named Andy Jones, see the disambiguation page.
Works by Andy Jones
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Jones, Andy
- Birthdate
- 1948-01-15
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- Canada
- Birthplace
- St. John's, Newfoundland
- Map Location
- Canada
Members
Reviews
Obviously I read this because I just read [b:Jack, the King of Ashes|22228451|Jack, the King of Ashes|Andy Jones|https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/book/50x75-a91bf249278a81aabab721ef782c4a74.png|41566134] and it's the same author. And I liked this one too! Not as much as Jack, but I'm still really into Canadian folk tales. And the illustrations are growing on me. I didn't pay too much attention to them in Jack but in this one there were a couple that really got me, like when Jack wakes show more up all the people in the village and they're all drawn as birds. show less
Any fairy tale that can maintain an overripe Newfoundland accent for 40 pages and to the land of the dead and back deserves my support is all I can say.
This illustrated tale is one of the many “Jack” tales from Newfoundland which have, according to the author’s notes, lived longer in speech than in print.
Andy Jones explains that the sentences and the style are more musical than grammatical and asks that readers attend to the “vivacity, intelligence, and the wit of generations of storytellers”.
If you love fairy and folk tales, you’ll love the vibrant illustrations of Darka Erdelji and the personable voice of the tale-teller in show more this slim volume.
It manages to feel both familiar and distinct and opens and closes with traditional phrases familiar to Newfoundland tale-spinners:
“Once upon a time, and a very good time it was, not in your time, indeed not in my time, but in olden times....” and “Now, when I left they were havin babies in basketfuls, and all they give me is a slipper and a glass. And I come all the way slidin on me ass.”
I read this one because I was encouraged by an interview on CBC's The Next Chapter; if you want to know about some of the other titles I've enjoyed that they've recommended, I bookchat about some others here. show less
Andy Jones explains that the sentences and the style are more musical than grammatical and asks that readers attend to the “vivacity, intelligence, and the wit of generations of storytellers”.
If you love fairy and folk tales, you’ll love the vibrant illustrations of Darka Erdelji and the personable voice of the tale-teller in show more this slim volume.
It manages to feel both familiar and distinct and opens and closes with traditional phrases familiar to Newfoundland tale-spinners:
“Once upon a time, and a very good time it was, not in your time, indeed not in my time, but in olden times....” and “Now, when I left they were havin babies in basketfuls, and all they give me is a slipper and a glass. And I come all the way slidin on me ass.”
I read this one because I was encouraged by an interview on CBC's The Next Chapter; if you want to know about some of the other titles I've enjoyed that they've recommended, I bookchat about some others here. show less
Lard tunderin' b'y, this is a good book.
I'm sure it's obvious I don't quite have the grasp of the Newfie dialect but I sure do love reading it! And I love Canadiana, and I love folk tales, and I love Newfoundland, so this book is great. And it's been nominated for the Governor General's Literary Award 2015 for children's literature, and the Silver Birch Express 2016! READ IT B'YS
I'm sure it's obvious I don't quite have the grasp of the Newfie dialect but I sure do love reading it! And I love Canadiana, and I love folk tales, and I love Newfoundland, so this book is great. And it's been nominated for the Governor General's Literary Award 2015 for children's literature, and the Silver Birch Express 2016! READ IT B'YS
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 8
- Members
- 69
- Popularity
- #250,751
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 4
- ISBNs
- 162
- Languages
- 6









