Andersen's Fairy Tales - Hans Christian Andersen
    • Andersen's Fairy Tales - Hans Christian Andersen
    • Andersen's Fairy Tales - Hans Christian Andersen

    Andersen's Fairy Tales - Hans Christian Andersen

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    Hans Christian Andersen is the best-loved of all tellers of fairy tales.

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    About the Book

    This collection of over forty of Andersen’s most popular stories includes The Mermaid, The Real Princess, The Red Shoes, The Little Match Girl, The Snow Queen, The Tinder Box, The Ugly Duckling and many more.

    It is delightfully illustrated in black-and white by those remarkable brothers, Charles, Thomas and William Heath Robinson

    • The Mermaid
    • Hans Clodhopper
    • The Flying Trunk
    • The Rose Elf
    • The Wild Swans
    • The Elf-Hill
    • The Real Princess
    • A Picture from the Ramparts
    • The Red Shoes
    • Thumbelisa
    • The Goblin and the Huckster
    • The Bottle Neck
    • The Steadfast Tin Soldier
    • The Angel
    • The Butterfly
    • Psyche
    • The Snail and the Rose-bush
    • The Girl Who Trod on a Loaf
    • The Nightingale
    • The Storks
    • The Little Match Girl
    • Great Claus and Little Claus
    • The Garden of Paradise
    • Little Tuk
    • The Wind’s Tale about Waldemar Daa and his Daughters
    • The Snow Queen: A Tale in Seven Stories
    • A Rose from Homer’s Grave
    • The Emperor’s New Clothes
    • The Naughty Boy
    • Holger the Dane
    • What the Moon Saw
    • The Tinder Box
    • The Story of a Mother
    • The Marsh King’s Daughter
    • The Galoshes of Fortune
    • The Bronze Boar
    • The Bell
    • Olé Luköié, the Dustman
    • The Swineherd
    • The Travelling Companions
    • The Ugly Duckling

    About the Author

    Hans Christian Andersen

    Few writers are as universally popular as Hans Christian Andersen (1805-1875). Using experiences from his own rather lonely life, he invented a form of fairy tales that was uniquely his, and which have been translated into over 150 languages.

    Hans Christian Andersen was born in the town of Odense, Denmark, on Tuesday, April 2nd, 1805. His father, Hans Andersen, was an indigent shoemaker who believed he was of aristocratic origin. Andersen’s mother, Anne Marie Andersdatter, worked as a washerwoman. Although she was uneducated and superstitious, she opened the world of folklore to their son.

    Andersen received little education. As a child he was highly emotional, suffering all kinds of fears and humiliations because of his tallness and effeminate interests. Encouraged by his parents, he composed his own fairy tales and arrange puppet theatre shows. His father loved literature and often took Andersen to the playhouse.

    In 1816 his father died and Andersen was forced to go to work. For a short time, he was apprenticed to a weaver and tailor and also worked at a tobacco factory. In 1822 Jonas Collin, one of the directors of the Royal Theatre and an influential government official gave Andersen a grant to enter the grammar school at Slagelse. He lived in the home of the school headmaster Meisling, who was irritated by the oversensitive student and tried to harden his character.

    In 1829, Andersen enjoyed considerable success with a short story entitled A Journey on Foot from Holmen’s Canal to the East Point of Amager. In the same year, he also published a comedy and a collection of poems. Though he made little progress writing and publishing immediately thereafter, in 1833 he received a small travelling grant from the King, enabling him to set out on the first of his many journeys through Europe.

    It was during 1835 that Andersen published the first instalment of his famous Fairy Tales. More stories, completing the first volume, were published in 1836 and 1837. With these collections, inspired by the great tradition of the Arabian Nights, and Household Tales, collected by the Brothers Grimm, Andersen became known as the father of the modern fairytale.

    Andersen’s identification with the unfortunate and outcast made his tales compelling. Some of Andersen’s tales revealed an optimistic belief in the triumph of the good, among them The Snow Queen and Little Ugly Duckling. Some ended unhappily, like The Little Match Girl. Andersen died in his home in Rolighed on 4th August 1875.

    Wordsworth Editions
    045427

    Fiche technique

    Langue
    Anglaise
    Dimensions
    127 mm x 198 mm
    Edition
    Wordsworth Editions
    Collection
    Wordsworth Classics Complete and Unabridged
    Auteur
    Hans Christian Andersen
    Poids
    259 g
    Nombre de pages
    400 pages
    Date de Parution
    01/05/1993
    Série
    Children's Classics

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