-
Title
-
en_US
Aesop's Fables: A New Translation
-
en_US
Oxford World's Classics
-
Description
-
en_US
Original language: grc
-
en_US
Translated with an Introduction and Notes by Laura Gibbs
-
Creator
-
en_US
Aesop
-
Date
-
2016-01-25T19:08:02Z
-
en_US
2009-02
-
en_US
2008
-
Date Available
-
2016-01-25T19:08:02Z
-
Date Issued
-
en_US
2008
-
Abstract
-
en_US
Here is the 2008 reissue of Dr. Gibbs' book from 2002. Nothing seems changed except the front cover's design, which is now taken from Edwin Noble's FS. And the price has gone up from $8.95 to $10.95. As I wrote then, it is a fine book. It delivers, I believe, what Robert and Olivia Temple promised. I think its chief accomplishment is that it presents the ancient Greek and Latin collections fully. In addition, there are links to the sources, and a good bibliography of these. The fables are well translated,with helpful comments appended to them. In keeping with the quest for completeness, there are often variant versions given of what would be the same Perry number but now has two numbers and two texts in Gibbs, e.g. 31-32, 40-41, 111-112, 139-140, and 255-256. The organization of the fables is novel. The main divisions are excellent. Fables themselves (#3-498) are separated from Aetiologies, Parodoxes, Insults, and Jokes (#499-600). Within the fables themselves, Gibbs offers groupings like Slaves and Masters, Animal Kings, Choosing a King, The Flock, and Self-Destruction, to take the first five. There must be seventy or eighty such groupings. I am sorry that Gibbs or her editor does not give an overview or outline of these topics somewhere. Indices at the end of the book track first Perry numbers, then sources, and finally all the people, animals, and things referred to. I will use this book a great deal.
-
Identifier
-
en_US
9780199540754
-
en_US
9502 (Access ID)
-
Language
-
en_US
eng
-
Publisher
-
en_US
Oxford University Press
-
en_US
Oxford
-
Subject
-
en_US
PA3855.E5 G533 2008
-
en_US
Aesop
-
en_US
Title Page Scanned
-
Type
-
en_US
Book, Whole