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Sto caricando le informazioni... The Goose Girl: A Story from the Brothers Grimmdi Eric A. Kimmel
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. This book tells the story of a young princess on her journey to meet her prince. Along the way she is abused and forced to change identities with her rude and evil servant. When they arrive to the kingdom the prince falsely takes the servant as his wife and leaves the true princess to become a goose hearder. Eventually the king finds out and sends out to kill the imposter while the princess lives happily ever after. I personally found this book to be one of the darker fairy tales I have read. The style was still whimsical but it was no where near the childlike innocence you would expect from a fairytale. I do not think this would be a good book to read to a group of young children. However I think for any study on ancient kingdoms or practice it would be fine. Summary: Goose girl is about a princess who has never known cruelty until she was sent to be married to a prince in the next kingdom. The servant who was supposed to serve her treated her unkindly and switched places with her and made the princess swear not to tell any living person. When they arrived to the new kingdom the servant was thought to be the princes and taken to marry the prince while the real princess was made to work as the servant to a boy who tended to geese. She is able to survive the mean goose boy, who likes to play tricks, by using her magic powers to keep him away. Every day she talks to her talking horse who was slain to deal with her sadness. When the king found out what had transpired he sentenced the the impostor to death and restore the true princess to her rightful place. Reaction: I thought it was a little dark and graphic in the way that it described the impostors death for this to be a children's book. If I ever did read this to a class I probably would ask for parent permission first. The artwork in this book is absolutely stunning though. Extension: 1. Ask the students to assess whether the punishment was just or not. 2. Have students rewrite the ending of this story in the way that they see fit. 'The Goose Girl' is a piece of dark folklore, originally told by the famous Brothers Grimm, retold by Eric A. Kimmel and illustrations by Robert Sauber. The world's tone has cruel characters taking advantage of the innocence of others. This innocence in the form of our princess who has been sheltered by her mother, the queen, since birth from any evil around. This princess grows up to be kind but a victim to her own maid Margaret who was sent by the queen to accompany the princess, along with a horse able to understand and speak any human language, named Falada, to a prince's kingdom who are betrothed to one another. The maid harasses and abuse the kind princess, now away from her protective kingdom. Taking her place as the princess promised to the prince knowing the real princess will do nothing about it, she has Falada, who witness all of this, to be beheaded. A dark ending for the poor horse; that is something expected from the style of the Brothers Grimm. There tone flows through the story as the real princess is sent to be a goose girl assisting a boy, and eventually is seen as the true princess by the King of the land thanks to Falada's disembodied head speaking to the princess. It is a grim tone even for the medieval setting to the very end where the faux princess pronounced her own horrible death. This is a story where anyone who wants to read a folklore that is not modernized like today's fairy tales can get a feel of the story of the original lore as it was when first created by the Brothers Grimm. nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
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On her way to marry a distant prince, a young princess is forced to trade places with her evil serving maid and becomes a goose girl instead of a bride when she reaches her destination. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)398.21Social sciences Customs, Etiquette, Folklore Folklore Folk literature Tales and lore of paranatural beings of human and semihuman formClassificazione LCVotoMedia:
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Prolific picture-book author Eric A. Kimmel retells the classic fairy-tale of the Goose Girl, originally from the Brothers Grimm, in this lovely title. Given a sheltered upbringing by her loving mother, a beautiful princess encounters envy and spite for the first time when she is sent out into the world in the care of the maid servant Margaret. Journeying to her intended bridegroom, the gentle princess is forced to trade places with Margaret, and she herself is made a goose girl, when they arrive at their destination. Only the prince's father suspects that there might be something more to this seeming servant...
Originally part of the Brothers Grimm collection from 1815, where it was known as Die Gänsemagd, this fairy-tale has been translated into English numerous times, although Kimmel does not specify the source for his own telling. Leaving that aside, the story here was engaging, with plenty of themes - the mother's protective love, the enchanted horse guardian - that I have encountered before in other tales. The artwork from Robert Sauber, who also illustrated Kimmel's Sirko and the Wolf: A Ukrainian Tale and I-Know-Not-What, I-Know-Not-Where: A Russian Tale, is lovely - sometimes dark, but also shot through with golden tones. Recommended to anyone who enjoys beautiful fairy-tale picture-books. ( )