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Zusatztext "[A] delightfully different fairy-tale experience for the contemporary reader. Even those well versed in literary fairy-tales will find something new and enchanting in this volume. . . . This collection is an essential addition to the libraries of those who study fairy-tale retellings and will be an enjoyable read for many others as well. Clever, revealing, and often oddly poignant, these stories deserve recognition." ---Brittany Warman, Marvels & Tales Informationen zum Autor Peter Davies (1897-1960) was the rumored inspiration for Peter Pan, the daredevil character created by his adoptive father, author J. M. Barrie. Davies was the founder of the publishing house Peter Davies Ltd. Maria Tatar is the John L. Loeb Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures and chair of the Program in Folklore and Mythology at Harvard University. She is the editor of The Annotated Peter Pan and the author of Enchanted Hunters (both Norton), among many other books. Klappentext "Alongside some sharp social satire, there is much to enjoy in this long-forgotten work, which offers a window into 1930s Britain, rather than a vista into fairyland. Maria Tatar's informative introduction is full of insights." --Neil Philip, author of The Illustrated Book of Myths "These classic fairy tales, extensively modernized by some of the best-known British writers of the 1930s, are brilliantly presented and interpreted by the gifted scholar Maria Tatar." --Alison Lurie, Frederic J. Whiton Professor of American Literature Emerita, Cornell University "This fascinating collection of classic fairy tales, rewritten in the 1930s by masters such as A. E. Coppard and Lord Dunsany, is sometimes comic, sometimes poignant, but always satirical. The magisterial introduction by Maria Tatar includes discussion of the tragic figure of the original editor, Peter Davies, aka 'Peter Pan, ' one of the ''Lost Boys' befriended by J. M. Barrie in Kensington Gardens." --William Gray, director of the Sussex Centre for Folklore, Fairy Tales and Fantasy, University of Chichester "When first published in 1934, the marvelously hybrid, often subversive stories of The Fairies Return awarded jarringly fresh meaning to the age-old potential of fairy tales to investigate the here and now. Eighty years later, the shady corporate dealers, corrupt politicians, drug and sex fiends, and children of nature that populate the collection are still with us, making the tales just as engaging today as they were then." --Nancy L. Canepa, Dartmouth College "A real treat of a book. The stories collected here offer sophisticated versions of well-known fairy tales, full of sly wit and satirical intent, and Maria Tatar's illuminating introduction makes a strong case for the importance of the volume in the history of the fairy tale in the twentieth century. A worthy addition to Jack Zipes's excellent Oddly Modern Fairy Tales series." --Stephen Benson, University of East Anglia "This is a welcome new edition of a collection that updated and breathed new life into the fairy tale." --Cristina Bacchilega, author of Postmodern Fairy Tales Zusammenfassung Jack becomes a trickster who must deliver England from the hands of three ogres after a failed government inquiry. In this book, the tales expose social anxieties, political corruption, predatory economic behavior, and destructive appetites even as they express hope for a better world. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction Maria Tatar 1 Jack the Giant Killer A. E. Coppard 39 Godfather Death Clemence Dane 65 The Fisherman and His Wife E. M. Delafield 95 Little Snow-White Lord Dunsany 121 Aladdin Anna Gordon Keown 137 Sindbad the Sailor Eric Linklater 163 Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves A. G. Macdonell 186 Puss in Boots Helen Simpson 208...