A review by trish204
Collected Folk Tales by Alan Garner

5.0

I started this book last night as many others over the past few days ... my problem is that I can't seem to finish them (I'm in a funk) so I thought short fairy tales would cure me. And they did - in fact, I got more than I ever imagined I would!
I had never heard of Alan Garner before but apparently he is a very well-known British author for children's fantasy books,all with mythological roots, and even Neil Gaiman has praised him a couple of times (no actual surprise since he loves mythology too).

Not to mention this nice comment by Philip Pullman on the back of my edition:
The great collections of British folk tales, such as this one, should be treated in two ways: first, they should be bound in gold and brought out on ceremonial occasions as national treasures; and second, they should be printed in editions of hundreds of thousands, at the public espense, and given away free to every young teacher and every new parent.

I quite agree.
Too few kids are still told about the old fairy tales (a topic Brad and I discussed only last night when we were talking about the Kalevala - I bet many here don't know what that is - and how most myths are somehow either descended from one another or at least make us see how related different languages and cultures are) and not many books are still telling the tales of old. Sure, some survive in popular works by Tolkien, Gaiman and Garner or even thanks to comicbook adaptations for the big screen. But most are completely lost; often also due to the fact that they were oral histories, only rarely recorded in written form. Books like this one are trying to help these stories survive.

This book contains 18 to me previously unknown stories and poems (some retold by Garner, some penned by the man himself). I always like discovering tales I've never known before because it is exciting; like standing before a cave in the dark, not knowing what to expect inside (a sense of adventure overcomes me every time I open such a book). :D
Some of the stories and poems are about well-known characters such as Loki and Baldur while others are about obscure ones like "rabbit" and "Shick-Shack"; some are from British folklore while there even is a Mayan legend (Vukub-Cakix) in it. Some at least have recognizable themes (one story, for example, is about the flood and vanishing/re-creation of land), but all are fantastic and let the imagination soar and one can feel the author's enthusiasm for fairy tales.


Thus, I was thrilled to discover so many new stories and was thoroughly entertained - not to mention the enchantment of the writing style that matched the magical theme of the book!