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Peter Stevenson

Auteur de Favourite Tales: The Enormous Turnip

68+ oeuvres 536 utilisateurs 6 critiques

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Comprend les noms: Peter Stevenson

Séries

Œuvres de Peter Stevenson

Favourite Tales: The Enormous Turnip (1994) — Illustrateur — 47 exemplaires
My Big Book of Stories and Rhymes (1998) 37 exemplaires
Favourite Tales: Peter and the Wolf (1993) — Illustrateur — 29 exemplaires
Five-minute Bedtime Tales (2002) 15 exemplaires
Boucle d'or et les trois ours (1997) 14 exemplaires
Welsh Folk Tales (2017) 13 exemplaires
Five Favourite Bedtime Tales (1998) 13 exemplaires
Five Favourite Fairy Tales (1600) 12 exemplaires
ABC123 (1984) 10 exemplaires
Kitten Tales for Bedtime Hb (1996) 10 exemplaires
Animal ABC (2003) 9 exemplaires
Bedtime Rhymes (Themed Rhymes) (1995) 9 exemplaires
Sailboats you can build (1977) 9 exemplaires
Best Loved Nursery Rhymes (1984) 8 exemplaires
Braithwaite's Original (1981) 7 exemplaires
The greatest days of racing (1972) 6 exemplaires
Humpty and Friends (2004) 5 exemplaires
Twinkle Twinkle and other rhymes (2008) 5 exemplaires
Amphora: A Boat You Can Build (1994) 5 exemplaires
5-Minute Puppy Tales for Bedtime (1996) 4 exemplaires
Les trois petits cochons (1999) 2 exemplaires
No Fairies (2011) 2 exemplaires
Cinderella (Play Mask Books) (1991) 2 exemplaires
The princess and Bungle (1986) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Caperucita Roja (2002) 1 exemplaire
Pikkuväen pupusatuja (1992) 1 exemplaire
1 2 3 The Counting Book (2003) 1 exemplaire
Ward Lock's animal ABC (1980) 1 exemplaire
Farm rhymes (Honey bear books) (1989) 1 exemplaire
Pikkuväen kisusatuja (1993) 1 exemplaire
A Far Cry from Noah (1994) 1 exemplaire
Os Três Porquinhos 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Read it Yourself: Sly Fox and Red Hen (1978) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions135 exemplaires
Baby's First Prayers (First Bible Collection) (1998) — Illustrateur — 87 exemplaires
Favourite Tales: The Elves and the Shoemaker (1990) — Illustrateur — 68 exemplaires
Favourite Tales: Pinocchio (1992) — Illustrateur — 63 exemplaires
My Sloppy Tiger (1836) — Illustrateur — 53 exemplaires
The Christmas Robin (1988) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions51 exemplaires
Little Red Riding Hood (Ladybird Favourite Tales) (1993) — Illustrateur — 46 exemplaires
My Big Book of Fairy Tales (2002) 44 exemplaires
Favourite Tales: Hansel and Gretel (1993) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions43 exemplaires
5-minute Bunny Tales for Bedtime (1988) — Illustrateur — 31 exemplaires
Read With Ladybird: Mystery Tour (1997) — Illustrateur — 29 exemplaires
5 Minute Barnyard Tales for Bedtime (1993) — Illustrateur — 16 exemplaires
Read With Ladybird: Seaside Surprise (1997) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions12 exemplaires
Fairy & Folk Tales from around the World (1986) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions11 exemplaires
Read With Ladybird: The School Photograph (2001) — Illustrateur — 10 exemplaires
A World of Folk Tales (1981) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions10 exemplaires
MISS BESSY AND COWBOY BILL (Dominie Joy Chapter Books) (2002) — Illustrateur — 10 exemplaires
Ting-a-ling! (2004) — Illustrateur — 8 exemplaires
The Night Before Christmas [Stevenson] (1985) — Illustrateur; Illustrateur — 8 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
male
Lieux de résidence
Poynton, Cheshire, England, UK
Professions
artist
illustrator

Membres

Critiques

Chwedl Cymraeg? means Do you speak Welsh, and Do you tell a tale in Welsh? This is the root of storytelling or chwedleua in Wales. This book is a collection of such tales - ancient and new. Many of the tales are very short just like stories you would hear in a conversation. A disparate collection, but enjoyable.
 
Signalé
LindaLiu | 1 autre critique | Sep 19, 2022 |
‘’These stories are of another world, an Otherworld so familiar to the folk of Ceredigion 100 years ago; exotic and enticing, dark and dangerous, curious and comical, a world of the marginalised and misunderstood, of flooded lands and lost languages. A dreamworld.’’

Let’s travel to Wales.

A wanderer stumbles upon an old estate and starts narrating the tales of the Tylwyth Tag. Of changelings and witches. Myths like Rhysyn and the Mermaid, the Tale of Taliesin. Stories of the men-women who demand justice, of devilry and Old Nick himself, of the White Lady of Broginan and the ghosts of Aberystwyth Promenade, of phantom funerals and corpse candles. The Talking Tree of Cwmystwyth, Operation Julie, legendary ‘’people of the road’’.

Written with elegant, playful humour and with a deep sense of nostalgia, respect and tenderness for the region and its inhabitants (mortals and otherwordly alike), Peter Stevenson has created one of the finest volumes in the exceptional Folk Tales of Britain and Ireland series.

‘’Ceredigion is a land of contrasts, where old meets new, where dolphins swim close to the biggest fish-processing plant in the land; where men dress in women’s clothes not only for a Friday night out with the boys, but to stand up for their liberty and carry out acts of subversion; where conjurers weave their spells in the hills away from those who think they wear pointy hats, cloaks, long grey beards and appear on Saturday night TV; where the last beavers in Wales lived on the banks of the Teifi rather than in a cage waiting for permission to be released as part of a reintroduction scheme; and where the fair folk are darker and more dangerous than the gossamer-winged sprites who live in the illustrations in children’s picture books. It is a land where people speak the language of story, and the stories have mud on their boots.’’

My reviews can also be found on https://theopinionatedreaderblog.wordpress.com/
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
AmaliaGavea | May 22, 2022 |
At first this seemed like a good idea. However, by the end I found myself in a blur of anecdotal, sometimes mythological, other times authorial passages which, although having chaptered themes, began to lose its pep. The author dips in and out of elucidation and sometimes I felt a bit disconcerted as how much the author had contributed to the telling of each piece and how much was "verbatim" from the sources from whence they came. In that I didn't want to read Welsh Folk Tales as told by Peter Stevenson, I wanted some background on who told the story and where it came from.

To be honest, the book for me was less a folk compendium and more a periodical assortment of loose tales. Having said that, it is still worth a read if you have an interest on the subject as it may introduce many myths and folktales that may otherwise remain unknown.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
RupertOwen | 1 autre critique | Apr 27, 2021 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
68
Aussi par
19
Membres
536
Popularité
#46,472
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
6
ISBN
97
Langues
5

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