Jack and the Three Sillies
by Richard Chase
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The story of foolish Jack who took the cow to market and by progressively sillier decisions and exchanges came home with a stone to hold the door in place. The new twist comes in his wife's search for three sillier people than Jack.Tags
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In 1943, Richard Chase - an authority on Anglo-American folklore - published The Jack Tales, a collection of eighteen traditional stories from the southern Appalachian tradition, all featuring the often silly (and always fortunate) hero Jack. This picture-book, originally published in 1950, is a follow-up to that collection, and presents an additional nineteenth Jack tale.
Here, the eponymous hero sets out to market with his wife's cow, having received strict instructions to return with no less than fifty dollars for her. But some rambunctious bovine behavior on the road convinces him to make a trade - the first of many - and when his wife next sees him, he has significantly less than fifty dollars! Infuriated by his behavior, Jack's show more wife leaves home, vowing not to return until she encounters three peoples as silly as he is...
This is an amusing tale, told in the dialect of the region, and illustrated in both color and black and white by Joshua Tolford. The tale-type, in which a series of foolish exchanges is made, will be very familiar to folklore enthusiasts. Recommended to all readers with an interest in Appalachian folklore and the "Jack Tales!" show less
Here, the eponymous hero sets out to market with his wife's cow, having received strict instructions to return with no less than fifty dollars for her. But some rambunctious bovine behavior on the road convinces him to make a trade - the first of many - and when his wife next sees him, he has significantly less than fifty dollars! Infuriated by his behavior, Jack's show more wife leaves home, vowing not to return until she encounters three peoples as silly as he is...
This is an amusing tale, told in the dialect of the region, and illustrated in both color and black and white by Joshua Tolford. The tale-type, in which a series of foolish exchanges is made, will be very familiar to folklore enthusiasts. Recommended to all readers with an interest in Appalachian folklore and the "Jack Tales!" show less
This book is quite interesting and entertaining. The older, southern talk in the books did make it hard to follow along at times, but other than that, the book was enjoyable to read. Definitely a silly book for older children.
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