Tales from Silver Lands


Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

(5 stars; 10 reviews)

The 1925 Newbery Medal Winner for best children's literature published in the United States, this collection of Central and South American indigenous folk tales holds stories that will still be new to most North American ears. Full of cultural charm, these tales also hold the same degree of strangeness, flights of fancy, and fearful shadows that can be found in the tales of European-based folklore. This book is entertaining for adults as well as children. (Summary by Lynette Caulkins) (6 hr 28 min)

Kapitel

A Tale of Three Tails 21:02 Gelesen von Lynette Caulkins
The Magic Dog 15:03 Gelesen von Mark Shellhammer
The Calabash Man 21:31 Gelesen von Keith Ghormley
Na-Ha the Fighter 14:07 Gelesen von Lynette Caulkins
The Humming-Bird and the Flower 8:01 Gelesen von Mark Shellhammer
The Magic Ball 18:44 Gelesen von Keith Ghormley
El Enano 18:37 Gelesen von Lynette Caulkins
The Hero Twins 15:51 Gelesen von Mark Shellhammer
The Four Hundred 22:36 Gelesen von Keith Ghormley
The Killing of Cabrakan 13:04 Gelesen von Lynette Caulkins
The Tale of the Gentle Folk 14:21 Gelesen von Mark Shellhammer
The Tale that Cost a Dollar 25:13 Gelesen von Keith Ghormley
The Magic Knot 21:10 Gelesen von Lynette Caulkins
The Bad Wishers 14:46 Gelesen von Mark Shellhammer
The Hungry Old Witch 20:43 Gelesen von Keith Ghormley
The Wonderful Mirror 25:00 Gelesen von Lynette Caulkins
The Tale of the Lazy People 28:54 Gelesen von Mark Shellhammer
Rairu and the Star Maiden 16:02 Gelesen von Keith Ghormley
The Cat and the Dream Man 53:48 Gelesen von Lynette Caulkins

Bewertungen

Unique and Wonderful Stories


(5 stars)

A wonderful collection of unique stories read by great readers. I thoroughly enjoyed listening to each story.

nice kids stories


(5 stars)

very fun and terrific narration

Original Storied


(5 stars)

I enjoyed this book.

Nice for the academic audience, but not for children


(5 stars)

Stories are not meant for children. They do NOT include lessons on the evils of whiteness or heteronormativity. They are, however, useful to the academic sociologist because they are vivid depictions of just how backwards and Raycyst society was back in 1925. We have progressed so much since then but have much much further to go. Imagine a publisher publishing a kids story today that did not at least try to attack the systemic raycysm that lies at the heart of American capitalism.