Foto dell'autore

Roy Brown (2) (1921–1982)

Autore di A Saturday in Pudney

Per altri autori con il nome Roy Brown, vedi la pagina di disambiguazione.

21+ opere 80 membri 2 recensioni

Opere di Roy Brown

A Saturday in Pudney (1966) 13 copie
Find Debbie! (1894) 10 copie
The White Sparrow (1975) 9 copie
The Viaduct (1969) 8 copie
The Day of the Pigeons (1974) 7 copie
Reynard the Fox (1900) 6 copie
The Big Test (1976) 3 copie
Escape the river (1972) 3 copie
Flight of Sparrows (1972) 3 copie
Port of Call 2 copie
Collision Course (1980) 2 copie
Octopus (Lions) (1982) 2 copie
The Siblings (1981) 2 copie
The Cage (1977) 2 copie
Suicide Course (1980) 1 copia
Trojan Rides Again (1978) 1 copia
Chubb Catches a Cold (1979) 1 copia
A nag called Wednesday (1978) 1 copia
Cover Drive (1979) 1 copia

Opere correlate

Is Anyone There? (1978) — Collaboratore — 27 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Nome legale
Brown, Roy Frederick
Data di nascita
1921-12-10
Data di morte
1982-09-14
Sesso
male
Luogo di nascita
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Luogo di residenza
Britain
Attività lavorative
teacher
deputy headmaster

Utenti

Discussioni

YA novel NOT House of Stairs but similar in Name that Book (Giugno 2013)

Recensioni

 
Segnalato
pszolovits | Feb 3, 2021 |
Published in 1969, this slim volume offers a modern retelling of The History of Reynard the Fox, a classic cycle of tales dating back to the 12th century, and revised and retold countless times in various European nations. The story of Reynard and his misadventures in and out of the court of King Noble the Lion, it contains many episodes highlighting its vulpine hero's duplicitous nature, his treachery, and his mistreatment of the other animals...

Read for my masters dissertation, which examined three centuries of retellings of the Reynard story for children in the English-speaking world, Reynard the Fox is an interesting twist on the story, and is an adaptation of Joseph Jacobs' 1895 version. Many of the more violent and scatalogical aspects of the original story - the attack on Isegrim's wife, the manner in which Tibert frees himself in the priest's barn, and so on - are omitted here, as is frequently the case in children's retellings, from the Victorian period onward. On the other hand, the conclusion, in which Reynard returns home triumphant, has not been changed. Roy Brown clearly felt some ambivalence about this, and about presenting Reynard as the hero of his own story, commenting in his foreword that the fox " is not the sort of "hero" one should look up to and try and imitate," going on to claim that the message to be taken away here, is the necessity of uniting against the "evil" that Reynard represents. Whatever one thinks about Brown's interpretation, his retelling here is fairly entertaining, and the accompanying artwork from John Vernon Lord, which looks to be done in some woodcut style, is humorous and appealing. Recommended to anyone looking for modern retellings of the Reynard story, or for tales about trickster foxes.… (altro)
 
Segnalato
AbigailAdams26 | Apr 9, 2020 |

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Autori correlati

Statistiche

Opere
21
Opere correlate
1
Utenti
80
Popolarità
#224,854
Voto
½ 4.3
Recensioni
2
ISBN
83
Lingue
5

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