Item
Fabeln
- Title
- en_US Fabeln
- Description
- en_US This is a hardbound book (hard cover)
- en_US Language note: German
- en_US Original language: mul
- en_US Erste Auflage, Nachdruck
- en_US Neu erzählt von Käthe Recheis
- Creator
- en_US Laimgruber, Monika See all items with this value
- Contributor
- en_US von Monika Laimgruber, Bilder
- Date
- 2016-01-25T19:58:56Z
- en_US 2009-08
- en_US 2006
- Date Available
- 2016-01-25T19:58:56Z
- Date Issued
- en_US 2003
- Abstract
- en_US The most memorable characteristic of this collection of fables by various authors may be the imposing colored picture on the cover of a fox in trench-coat looking up at a bunch of grapes. The gray-and-white interior designs are less imposing. The best of them are the footprints going into the lion's cave on 49. The blurb on the back-cover rightly claims that Recheis tells the stories in clear language without pointing a raised finger -- and so that children today gladly hear and read them. There are forty-two fables here. Many are from Aesop and La Fontaine. Others come from Pfeffel, Lessing, Tolstoy, Triller, Ebner-Eschenbach, Schopenhauer, Krylov, da Vince, and de' Giorgi Bertola. There are also representatives from American Indians, from Germany, China, and Tibet. Several are new to me and enjoyable. The young wolf who wants to fly (11) of course fails but then yells at the birds You cannot run as fast as we can! Each in His Own Way (18) by Lessing has a mother swallow teaching her child that she does not have to collect food for the summer as the ants do. Triller's brook hastens by the pretty meadow (44) only to end up in a swamp. Schopenhauer writes of the porcupines in the cold who tried keeping warm by getting close but then pricked each other with their quills. They kept going back and forth between being cold and getting pricked until they found the right distance -- and called it politeness and good behavior (63). Tolstoy (73) tells of a mouse who had a nest under a small hold in a granary: one grain after another fell through, always enough and easy to come by. But in time she found the hole too small. She gnawed it bigger, and lots of grains fell at once. She went out to invite all the other mice to a great party. When they got there, they found that the farmer had noticed the large hole and patched it. A rat had seen the large pile of grain and ate it all up!
- Identifier
- en_US 9783209040404
- en_US 6741 (Access ID)
- Language
- en_US ger
- Publisher
- en_US öbvhpt Verlagsgmbh
- en_US Vienna
- Subject
- en_US PT2635.E14 F33 2006 See all items with this value
- en_US Aesop et al See all items with this value
- en_US Title Page Scanned See all items with this value
- Type
- en_US Book, Whole
- Item sets
- Carlson Fable Collection Books