Folk-tales of the British Isles

Front Cover
Kevin Crossley-Holland
Pantheon Books, 1988 - Social Science - 393 pages
Folktales from English, Irish, Welsh, Scottish sources and from the surrounding islands (Isle of Man, Orkney, Shetland, Isle of Wight). The 67 tales include the Three bears, Jack and the beanstalk, Tom Thumb, and King o' the cats.

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Contents

Origin of the Welsh Wales P H Emerson
93
Fior Usga Ireland Thomas Crofton Croker
100
KINGS AND HEROES
109
Copyright

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About the author (1988)

Kevin Crossley-Holland is a well-known poet, a prize-winning children's author, and a translator. Crossley-Holland has translated Beowulf and The Exeter Book of Riddles from the Anglo-Saxon. He has collaborated with composers Nicola Lefanu (The Green Children and The Wildman), Rupert Bawden (The Sailor's Tale), Sir Arthur Bliss, William Mathias, and Stephen Paulus. Crossley-Holland's book The Seeing Stone won the Guardian Children's Fiction Award, the Smarties Prize Bronze Medal, and the Tir na n-Og Award. The trilogy has won critical acclaim and been translated into twenty-five languages. His recent and forthcoming books are The Hidden Roads: A Memoir of Childhood, Bracelet of Bones and his new and selected poems The Mountains of Norfolk. Crossley-Holland often lectures abroad on behalf of the British Council and offers poetry and prose workshops and talks on the Anglo-Saxons and Vikings, King Arthur, heroines and heroes, and myth, legend and folk-tale. Kevin Crossley-Holland is an Honorary Fellow of St Edmund Hall, Oxford, a patron of the Society for Storytelling, and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. He lives on the north Norfolk coast in East Anglia with his wife and children.

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