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Double edged power--Webs of enchantment--Deliverance from magic's coils.Tags
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In the mid-eighties I saw television ads for this series and brought them not so subtly to my parents’ attention, without result. They dismissed it as not worth the money. Twenty-five years later I found this volume in a garage sale and greedily snapped it up for a buck.
I anticipated a delving into the history of myths, a through-the-years overview of legends which have spells and binding as their key elements and some kind of study around how those legends were produced and evolved, noteworthy running themes, how the morals linked to their times, comparison of cultures, etc.
No effort was made along these lines. The entire volume speaks of laziness. Even the artwork, the element I was most prepared to praise, turns out to be show more entirely from secondary sources and nothing was commissioned. There’s a list of sources at the back, but no footnotes or endnotes refer to them. Transitions are weak and poorly marked, the layout interruptive. The overall impression is a hastily gathered body of research was collected from which a number of euro-centric stories were cited and then linked through a running narrative. The book’s narrative commentates on the dangers of the fairy world, etc., but presents no thesis and has no substantial introduction or conclusion concerning its topic.
The content isn’t entertaining enough for passing on to a youth, its most familiar stories more engagingly told in my young son’s generic fairy tales collection. Presumably every volume is similarly written. This series was a money grab, displaying only just enough effort and substance to prevent its being returned to the publisher by the truckload. show less
I anticipated a delving into the history of myths, a through-the-years overview of legends which have spells and binding as their key elements and some kind of study around how those legends were produced and evolved, noteworthy running themes, how the morals linked to their times, comparison of cultures, etc.
No effort was made along these lines. The entire volume speaks of laziness. Even the artwork, the element I was most prepared to praise, turns out to be show more entirely from secondary sources and nothing was commissioned. There’s a list of sources at the back, but no footnotes or endnotes refer to them. Transitions are weak and poorly marked, the layout interruptive. The overall impression is a hastily gathered body of research was collected from which a number of euro-centric stories were cited and then linked through a running narrative. The book’s narrative commentates on the dangers of the fairy world, etc., but presents no thesis and has no substantial introduction or conclusion concerning its topic.
The content isn’t entertaining enough for passing on to a youth, its most familiar stories more engagingly told in my young son’s generic fairy tales collection. Presumably every volume is similarly written. This series was a money grab, displaying only just enough effort and substance to prevent its being returned to the publisher by the truckload. show less
This is a wonderful series, beautifully illustrated, and selections fitting the subtitle. A Bibliography, Picture Credits, and Acknowledgements appear at the end of each book. There are far too many to enter singularly.
This book has 3 chapters with appropriate tales:
Chapter One: Double Edged Power
Chapter Two: Webs of Entertainment
Chapter Three: Deliverance from Magic Coils
This book has 3 chapters with appropriate tales:
Chapter One: Double Edged Power
Chapter Two: Webs of Entertainment
Chapter Three: Deliverance from Magic Coils
Tells the stories of sorcerers, fairies, enchanted animals, a journey to the underworld, an unsolvable riddle, and magical metamorphoses. Source: Publisher
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Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Spells and Bindings (Enchanted World) (Enchanted World)
- Original publication date
- 1984
- First words
- Who could have foretold the passion of Isolt the Fair and Tristram?
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Diarmuid had ceased to love, but he never forgot how he had loved, in a world that was foreign to his own.
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- Members
- 441
- Popularity
- 69,337
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.88)
- Languages
- Dutch, English, German
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 5
- ASINs
- 3





























































