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Title
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en_US
Far East Stories for Pleasure Reading
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en_US
Pleasure Reading Series
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Description
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en_US
This is a hardbound book (hard cover)
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en_US
This book has a dust jacket (book cover)
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en_US
By Edward W. Dolch, Marguerite P. Dolch, and Beulah F. Jackson
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Creator
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en_US
Dolch, Edward W.
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Contributor
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en_US
Dolch, Marguerite
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Date
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2016-01-25T19:03:24Z
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en_US
1997-06
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en_US
1953
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Date Available
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2016-01-25T19:03:24Z
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Date Issued
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en_US
1953
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Abstract
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en_US
Far East here includes China, Japan, Korea, Indonesia, Tibet, and India. There are eighteen stories, each with a simple full-page illustration featuring orange coloring. The early Chinese and Japanese stories here involve a good deal of magic, with ogres and dragons. Two of the stories are particularly touching. The first encompasses the first two selections here (1, 11). The emperor's daughter finally finds a suitor who can give her a blue rose, since she loves him so much that she declares that this white rose is blue. And the boy who paints cats draws a huge screen full of them, and they slay the ogre who has ravaged this temple (31). The Mirror That Made Trouble (71) has fun with a family's first experience of a mirror. The two Tibetan stories on the stone lion (81, 89) are a good comment on greed. The Maker of Puppets (99) is the wistful Indonesian story of a man who watches a (chess?) game and returns to find that time has passed and it is now decades later. Another Indonesian tale qualifies as a fable, I believe. It features the mouse deer who falls into a lime pit (109). He starts to announce that only those in the lime pit will be saved on this day when the world is coming to an end. And anyone who sneezes cannot be allowed in the pit. After he gets several large animals into the pit with him, he sneezes and is thrown out! The Stone Crusher (119), another fable, goes through a progression like that in The Mouse's Marriage. Whatever the stone crusher wishes to be, he becomes. In succession he becomes a rajah, the sun, a cloud, the wind, and a mountain--in each case learning that the next is stronger than he. As a mountain, he learns that the stone crusher is stronger than he is. So now he is a contented stone crusher. The Tiger, the Brahman, and the Jackal (127) and The Mice That Ate the Iron Balance (137) are traditional fables from India. This is the first time I have seen a balance made the subject of the story's controversy. The last pair of stories tell of the brave potmaker who happened, while looking for his donkey, upon a tiger who had heard an old woman proclaim in a storm that the dripping was attacking her worse than any elephant or tiger. In the dark, the potmaker mistook the tiger for his donkey, and the tiger mistook the potmaker for a dripping. The result: the potmaker became rich and famous for subduing a fierce tiger! Soon the potmaker was summoned to command a great army being attacked. He ends up being tied to a fierce horse, holding a tree in his hands, and riding through the enemy camp. The enemy army gives up without a fight!
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Identifier
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en_US
4282 (Access ID)
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Language
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en_US
eng
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Publisher
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en_US
Garrard Publishing Company
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en_US
Champaign, IL
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Subject
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en_US
PZ8.1.D7 Far 1953
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en_US
Far East
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en_US
Title Page Scanned
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Type
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en_US
Book, Whole