tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1750120863647373520.post927949550395994614..comments2023-08-08T11:48:10.725+01:00Comments on swisslet: sleep with one eye open...swisslethttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16708248700851998044noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1750120863647373520.post-32210973005416138262012-09-29T21:34:33.782+01:002012-09-29T21:34:33.782+01:00That said, the stories are filled with a certain e...That said, the stories are filled with a certain earthiness that later versions lack. Remember Rapunzel casually remarking to the witch that she was so much lighter than the prince as she climbed up, and that's how the witch discovers him? In the actual story, the far neater explanation is that Rapunzel innocently remarks to the witch that all her clothes were getting mysteriously tight.....swisslethttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16708248700851998044noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1750120863647373520.post-1546755620881481502012-09-29T21:30:15.610+01:002012-09-29T21:30:15.610+01:00I'm reading and enjoying the Pullman book very...I'm reading and enjoying the Pullman book very much, although the stories are so close to the classic translations that you wonder why he's bothered. Bringing the stories to a new audience, I guess. Re. Hansel and Gretel, the witch in the story is clearly a different person to the stepmother, she's described as being incredibly old and blind (which is how Hansel can fool her into thinking that the twig is his skinny finger and he's not fattening up). Pullman says in his notes at the end of the story that it was later stories where the conveniently disappearing stepmother and the witch were merged. Good tales though, of course. The Boy who couldn't get the chills and faithful Johannes are my favourites so far. Very funny. swisslethttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16708248700851998044noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1750120863647373520.post-6557208436440980162012-09-28T20:41:25.547+01:002012-09-28T20:41:25.547+01:00I love fairy tales and own several volumes of them...I love fairy tales and own several volumes of them. Thanks to you I've lately felt like dusting them off.<br /><br />I think you and I discussed this, but you might really like the TV show, "Grimm." I don't know if it's available there yet, but I really enjoy it.Aravishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07766002202567429153noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1750120863647373520.post-79848859072545798052012-09-28T02:30:54.179+01:002012-09-28T02:30:54.179+01:00Hmm... My favourite fairy tale is that of the Sold...Hmm... My favourite fairy tale is that of the Soldier and the Tinderbox, because it has some fairly fantastical elements. Dogs with eyes the size of dinner plates?<br /><br />I also read a treatise a while back on fairytales being distorted from their rather more grim tellings into more mundane versions - the witch for example in Hansel and Gretal actually being their own stepmother (she vanishes mysteriously at the end of the story after the cannibalistic witch is burnt to death in her own oven).<br /><br />So thanks, I'll have a look for these books and have a read.<br /><br />But if you are thinking of telling your own, you should at least have a gander at Struwwelpeter, for even more grisly endings to naughty boys and girls.<br /><br /><br /><br />Cruciferhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13930468654741891322noreply@blogger.com