Full Description
The definitive English translation of the celebrated story collection regarded as a landmark of Norwegian literature and culture-now in paperback
 The extraordinary folktales collected by Peter Christen AsbjØrnsen and JØrgen Moe began appearing in Norway in 1841. Over the next two decades the publication of subsequent editions under the title Norske folkeeventyr made the names AsbjØrnsen and Moe synonymous with Norwegian storytelling traditions. Tiina Nunnally's vivid translation of their monumental collection is the first new English translation in more than 150 years-and the first ever to include all sixty original tales. 
 Magic and myth inhabit these pages in figures both familiar and strange. Giant trolls and talking animals are everywhere. The winds take human form. A one-eyed old woman might seem reminiscent of the Norse god Odin. We meet sly aunts, resourceful princesses, and devious robbers. The clever and fearless boy Ash Lad often takes center stage as he ingeniously breaks spells and defeats enemies to win half the kingdom. These stories, set in Norway's majestic landscape of towering mountains and dense forests, are filled with humor, mischief, and sometimes surprisingly cruel twists of fate. All are rendered in the deceptively simple narrative style perfected by AsbjØrnsen and Moe-now translated into an English that is as finely tuned to the modern ear as it is true to the original Norwegian. 
 Included here-for the very first time in English-are AsbjØrnsen and Moe's Forewords and Introductions to the early Norwegian editions of the tales. AsbjØrnsen gives us an intriguing glimpse into the actual collection process and describes how the stories were initially received, both in Norway and abroad. Equally fascinating are Moe's views on how central characters might be interpreted and his notes on the regions where each story was originally collected. Nunnally's informative Translator's Note places the tales in a biographical, historical, and literary context for the twenty-first century. 
 The Norwegian folktales of AsbjØrnsen and Moe are timeless stories that will entertain, startle, and enthrall readers of all ages. 
  
Contents
Contents 
 Translator's Note 
 Norwegian Folktales 
 About Ash Lad, Who Stole the Troll's Silver Ducks, Coverlet, and Golden Harp 
 The Gjertrud Bird 
 The Griffin 
 The Quandary 
 Richman Peddler Per 
 Ash Lad, Who Competed with the Troll 
 About the Boy Who Went to the North Wind and Demanded the Flour Back 
 The Virgin Mary as Godmother 
 The Three Princesses in White Land 
 Some Women Are Like That 
 Everyone Thinks Their Own Children Are Best 
 A Tale of Courtship 
 The Three Aunts 
 The Widow's Son 
 The Husband's Daughter and the Wife's Daughter 
 The Rooster and the Hen in the Nut Forest 
 The Bear and the Fox 
 Why the Bear Has a Stump of a Tail 
 The Fox Cheats the Bear Out of His Christmas Meal 
 Gudbrand Slope 
 Kari Stave-Skirt 
 The Fox as Shepherd 
 The Blacksmith They Didn't Dare Let Into Hell 
 The Rooster and the Hen 
 The Rooster, the Cuckoo, and the Black Grouse 
 Lillekort 
 The Doll in the Grass 
 Paal Next-Door 
 Soria Moria Castle 
 Sir Per 
 Little Aase Goosegirl 
 The Boy and the Devil 
 The Seven Foals 
 Gidske 
 The Twelve Wild Ducks 
 The Master Thief 
 The Three Sisters Who Were Taken Into the Mountain 
 About the Giant Troll Who Never Carried His Heart With Him 
 Dappleband 
 Nothing is Needed by the One That All Women Love 
 Ash Lad, Who Got the Princess to Say He Was Lying 
 The Three Billy Goats Gruff, Who Were Supposed to Go Up to the Mountain Pasture to Fatten Up 
 East of the Sun and West of the Moon 
 The Hen Who Had to Go to Dovre Mountain, or Else the Whole World Would Perish 
 The Man Who Had to Keep House 
 Tom Thumb 
 Haaken Speckled-Beard 
 Master Maiden 
 Well Done and Poorly Rewarded 
 True and Untrue 
 Per and Paal and Esben Ash Lad 
 The Mill That Keeps Grinding at the Bottom of the Sea 
 The Maiden on the Glass Mountain 
 Butterball 
 Big-Per and Little-Per 
 Ragged-Cap 
 The Bushy Bride 
 The Tabby-Cat on Dovre Mountain 
 Farmer Weather-Beard 
 The Blue Twine 
 The Honest Four-Skilling Coin 
 The Old Man of the House 
 Foreword to the Second Norwegian Edition 
 From the Introduction to the Second Norwegian Edition 
 JØrgen Moe 
 Foreword to the Third Norwegian Edition 
 Peter Christen AsbjØrnsen 
 Foreword to the Fourth Norwegian Edition 
 Peter Christen AsbjØrnsen 
 Notes on the Regional Collection Sites of the Tales

              
              
              
              

