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A little girl meets a hungry wolf in the forest while on her way to visit her grandmother.
'I hope it's not too far away,' says Red Knit Cap Girl. 'Follow the light of the Moon,' calls Owl. In this heartwarming follow-up to Naoko Stoop's debut Red Knit Cap Girl, Red Knit Cap Girl meets a lost Polar Bear Cub. Determined to help him find his way home, to an Arctic land of ice and snow, Red Knit Cap Girl, White Bunny, and Polar Bear Cub set off on an unforgettable voyage. Gorgeously illustrated on wood grain, Red Knit Cap Girl's curiosity, imagination, and joy will captivate the hearts of readers young and old. Simple prose and luminous pictures will remind readers that even small actions - such as recycling - can help to solve big world problems, in this inspiring story that celebrates friendship, bravery, and the importance of home.
Whilst leaving footpaths should never be done, Straying from stories is all sorts of fun! Little Red Reading Hood loves reading books and making up stories of her own. When she meets a cunning wolf while on her way to the library, he convinces her to stray from the path and read for a little while. But hasn’t she read this in a story before? Perhaps it’s time she came up with a new ending . . . This is a contemporary and fun take on the classic fairy tale, Little Red Riding Hood, created by an incredible picture book partnership. With a playful rhyming story by Lucy Rowland and Ben Mantle's entertaining illustrations, Little Red Reading Hood will inspire children, and adults, about the magic of books and reading.
Table of Contents RED CAP TALES CERTAIN SMALL PHARAOHS THAT KNEW NOT JOSEPH RED CAP TALES TOLD FROM WAVERLEY THE FIRST TALE FROM "WAVERLEY"[1] I. GOOD-BYE TO WAVERLEY-HONOUR II. THE ENCHANTED CASTLE III. THE BARON AND THE BEAR THE FIRST INTERLUDE OF ACTION THE SECOND TALE FROM "WAVERLEY" I. THE CATTLE-LIFTING II. THE ROBBER'S CAVE THE SECOND INTERLUDE THE THIRD TALE FROM "WAVERLEY" I. THE CHIEF OF THE MAC-IVORS AND THE CHIEF'S SISTER II. MISFORTUNES NEVER COME SINGLE THE THIRD INTERLUDE—BEING MAINLY A FEW WORDS UPON HEROES THE FOURTH TALE FROM "WAVERLEY" HERE AND THERE AMONG THE HEATHER INTERLUDE OF STICKING-PLASTER THE FIFTH TALE FROM "WAVERLEY" THE WHITE COCKADE THE SIXTH TALE FROM "WAVERLEY" BLACK LOOKS AND BRIGHT SWORDS INTERLUDE OF BREVITY THE LAST TALE FROM "WAVERLEY" THE BARON'S SURPRISE THE END OF THE LAST TALE FROM "WAVERLEY." RED CAP TALES TOLD FROM GUY MANNERING GUY MANNERING WHERE WE TOLD THE SECOND TALE A FIRST TALE FROM "GUY MANNERING" I. WITCHCRAFT AND WIZARDRY INTERLUDE OF INTERROGATION THE SECOND TALE FROM "GUY MANNERING" I. HAPPY DOMINIE SAMPSON II. DANDIE DINMONT III. IN THE LION'S MOUTH INTERLUDE OF LOCALITY THE THIRD TALE FROM "GUY MANNERING" THE RETURN OF DIRK HATTERAICK THE FOURTH TALE FROM "GUY MANNERING" THE FIGHT IN THE CAVE THE END OF THE FOURTH AND LAST TALE FROM "GUY MANNERING." INTERLUDE OF CONSULTATION RED CAP TALES TOLD FROM ROB ROY THE FIRST TALE FROM "ROB ROY" FRANK THE HIGHWAYMAN INTERLUDE OF DISCUSSION THE SECOND TALE FROM "ROB ROY" I. IN THE TOILS OF RASHLEIGH II. ROB ROY AT LAST III. THE BAILIE FIGHTS WITH FIRE IV. THE DROWNING OF THE SPY INTERLUDE OF EXPOSTULATION THE THIRD TALE FROM "ROB ROY" I. IN THE HANDS OF THE PHILISTINES II. THE ESCAPE III. THE DEATH OF RASHLEIGH THE END OF THE LAST TALE FROM "ROB ROY." RED CAP TALES TOLD FROM THE ANTIQUARY THE FIRST TALE FROM "THE ANTIQUARY" I. THE MYSTERIOUS MR. LOVEL II. THE NIGHT OF STORM INTERLUDE OF WARNING THE SECOND TALE FROM "THE ANTIQUARY" I. LOVEL FIGHTS A DUEL II. THE SEEKERS OF TREASURE III. MISTICOT'S GRAVE A QUITE SUPERFLUOUS INTERLUDE THE THIRD TALE FROM "THE ANTIQUARY" I. THE EARL'S SECRET II. THE MOTHER'S VENGEANCE III. THE HEIR OF GLENALLAN THE END OF THE LAST TALE FROM "THE ANTIQUARY."
When the little girl in the red cap puts her basket over her arm and sets off through the woods to grandmother's house, one of the best-loved fairy tales of all time unfolds. Long out of print, this classic version of the tale will be enjoyed by all who love beautiful books. A New York Times Best Illustrated Book. Full color.
So I told them these stories—and others—to lure them to the printed book, much as carrots are dangled before the nose of the reluctant donkey. They are four average intelligent children enough, but they hold severely modern views upon storybooks. Waverley, in especial, they could not away with. They found themselves stuck upon the very threshold. Now, since the first telling of these Red Cap Tales, the Scott shelf in the library has been taken by storm and escalade. It is permanently gap-toothed all along the line. Also there are nightly skirmishes, even to the laying on of hands, as to who shall sleep with Waverley under his pillow. It struck me that there must be many oldsters in the world who, for the sake of their own youth, would like the various Sweethearts who now [vi]inhabit their nurseries, to read Sir Walter with the same breathless eagerness as they used to do—how many years agone? It is chiefly for their sakes that I have added several interludes, telling how Sweetheart, Hugh John, Sir Toady Lion, and Maid Margaret received my petty larcenies from the full chest of the Wizard. At any rate, Red Cap succeeded in one case—why should he not in another? I claim no merit in the telling of the tales, save that, like medicines well sugar-coated, the patients mistook them for candies and—asked for more. The books are open. Any one can tell Scott's stories over again in his own way. This is mine. S. R. CROCKETT.
This unique anthology contributes to cross-cultural exchange and facilitates comparative study of the tale for readers interested in fairy-tale studies, cultural studies, and literary history.
"Alan Dundes of the University of California, Berkeley, continues his exploration of well-loved fairy tales with this casebook on one of the best-known of them all: Little Red Riding Hood. The twelve essays are by international scholars representing an impressive cross section of theoretical approaches."--Page 4 of cover.
Mrs Midas, Queen Kong, Mrs Lazarus, the Kray sisters, and a huge cast of others startle with their wit, imagination, lyrical intuition and incisiveness.
This fascinating novel is a collection of stories inspired by the Waverley Novels penned by Sir Walter Scott. His story follows Edward Waverley, an English gentleman of honor, who chooses an occupation in the army at the time just before the Jacobite uprising of 1745 on advice of his father. He has an officer's commission. On leave from army training, he visits friends of his family in Scotland, as he is not far from their place. He enjoys their Scottish hospitality. His head is full of the romantic notions of his unstructured education, including much reading, and he is startled to find himself in the midst of loyalists who support the return of the House of Stuart and the Stuart prince, known as Bonnie Prince Charlie and the Young Chevalier to his supporters and as the Younger Pretender to his foes.