by Golden Books
| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 249206 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $19.87 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | |
| Release Date: | 2003-09-09 |
| Label: | Golden Books |
| UPC: | 014794826364 |
| Pages: | 128 |
| Binding: | Hardcover |
| Publication Date: | 2003-09-09 |
| Published By: | Golden Books |
| ASIN: | 037582636X |
| Category: | Book |
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Product Description
The city is under siege! The King, enraged by his wife’s dishonesty, has vowed to marry every young woman in the city only to have each bride beheaded the following day at sunrise. But Scheherazade, the beautiful and wise daughter of the King’s vizier, foils the King’s plans by telling stories so captivating and imaginative that the King delays her death every day to hear how each enchanted tale ends. From “Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp” and “Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves” to “Sinbad the Sailor,” the most famous stories from the great classic A Thousand and One Nights comprise this collection of beautifully told tales—brought powerfully to life by the vivid illustrations of Gustaf Tenggren.
Customer Reviews
Creepy, beautiful illustrations and elegant, simple retelling - Reviewed on 2006-03-20
6 customers found this review helpful.
I adored this exotic, superbly illustrated book when I was a child and was happy to find it again for my own child, who is now six. She is just ready for it -- many of the stories are rather gory in parts, but their fantasical elements keep them from seeming too threatening. (However, 4-8 as suggested by Amazon, is not the appropriate age, not only because of the stories' violent themes, but their narrative complexity. 6-10 is probably closer to the mark, with few children under eight ready to read these alone.) We are both really enjoying this as a read-aloud, and I agree with the reader who suggested that, given our current unfortunate military engagements, the material is peculiarly timely. One interesting element to note in reading these stories to children, is the emphasis in some of them on female invention and resourcefulnes -- in Scheherazde and Ali Baba, we see women as oppressed underdogs who manage to save the day through their courage and craftiness. Yeah!
Know Thy Enemy - Reviewed on 2004-02-21
6 customers found this review helpful, 3 did not.
Stories from Baghdad? Tales of Arabia (Saudi or not)? Knowing the stories that shape the lives of children half a world away where our military presence is affecting daily life so heavily might be good for our own children. It's a lot harder to vilify an enemy whose traditional stories live in your heart, I think. Not cute, not spiffed up (like the Disney version of Aladdin), these are PG-rated versions of the 1957 Tenggren Golden book edition. Included are Scheherazade, aladdin, Ali Baba, The Caliph and the Cucumbers, the Magic Horse, The Fisherman and the Afreet, Sleeper Awakened, Sinbad the Sailor, the Man Who never Laughed, The Serpent Queen and the Poor Man's Dream
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Book Subjects
- Preschool Folk Tales
- Juvenile Fiction
- Children's 4-8 - Picturebooks
- Children: Grades 1-2
- Classics
- Fairy Tales & Folklore - Asian
- Juvenile Fiction / Classics
- Fairy Tales & Folklore - Anthologies
- Arab countries
- Arabs
- Fairy tales
- Folklore