The Complete Grimms Fairy Tales by Jacob Grimm


The Complete Grimms Fairy Tales
Title : The Complete Grimms Fairy Tales
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : -
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 880
Publication : First published December 20, 1812
Awards : Zilveren Griffel (2006), Zilveren Penseel (2006)

Originally titled Children’s and Household Tales, The Complete Grimm’s Fairy Tales contains the essential bedtime stories for children worldwide for the better part of two centuries. The Brothers Grimm, Jacob and Wilhelm, were German linguists and cultural researchers who gathered legendary folklore and aimed to collect the stories exactly as they heard them. 2012 marked the 200th anniversary of Grimm’s Fairy Tales, and what better way to celebrate than to include all 211 stories into the Knickerbocker Classic Series?

Featuring all your favorite classics, including “Hansel and Gretel,” “Cinderella,” “The Frog Prince,” “Rapunzel,” “Snow White,” “Rumpelstiltskin,” and dozens more, The Complete Grimm’s Fairy Tales is also accompanied by 40 color plates and 60 black and white illustrations from award-winning English illustrator Arthur Rackham, whose books and prints are now highly sought-after collectibles.

The third title in the Knickerbocker Classic series has 800 pages of classic fairy tales to enjoy and will also feature a full-cloth binding, ribbon marker, and will fit neatly in an elegant slipcase for your personal library collection.

Also includes a selection of stunning color reproductions by the famous illustrator, Arthur Rackham.


The Complete Grimms Fairy Tales Reviews


  • Ahmad Sharabiani

    Kinder- und Hausmärchen = Children's and Household Tales = The Complete Grimm's Fairy Tales = Grimms' Fairy Tales, Jacob Grimm, Wilhelm Grimm

    Grimms' Fairy Tales, is a collection of fairy tales by the Grimm brothers or "Brothers Grimm", Jakob and Wilhelm, first published on 20 December 1812.

    The first edition contained 86 stories, and by the seventh edition in 1857, had 211 unique fairy tales.

    Including “Hansel and Gretel,” “Cinderella,” “The Frog Prince,” “Rapunzel,” “Snow White,” “Rumpelstiltskin,” ...

    تاریخ نخستین خوانش: سال2001میلادی

    عنوان: جهان افسانه سری کامل افسانه های برادران گریم؛ اثر: برادران گریم؛ یاکوب لودویگ کارل گریم؛ ویلهلم کارل گریم؛ مترجم: هرمز ریاحی؛ بهزاد برکت؛ نسرین طباطبائی؛ تهران، فکر روز، سال1378؛ در735ص؛ شابک9643430286؛ موضوع: افسانه های پریان از نویسندگان آلمان - سده19م

    دو برادر «یاکوب و ویلهلم کارل گریم»، پیشاهنگ گردآورندگان قصه های «آلمان» هستند، سفرها کردند، تا اصیلترین روایتها را بیابند، تا سرانجام این دویست قصه فراهم آمد، قصه هایی بازمانده از اسطوره های کهن آن دیار هستند؛ همانند قصه های: «رامپل استیل اسکین (دختر نخ‌ریس و آدم کوچولو)»؛ «سفید برفی»؛ «راپانزل»؛ «شاهزاده ی قورباغه»؛ «سیندرللا»؛ و «هانسل و گرتل»؛ و ...؛

    تاریخ بهنگام رسانی 02/02/1400هجری خورشیدی؛ 08/12/1400هجری خورشیدی؛ ا. شربیانی

  • Praveen

    First, I share with you how I decided to read this book. Read my silly coincidence!

    A prelude fairy tale :)
    -------------------
    It was dark already when I was getting down through the steps, from my rooftop after my lazy late evening walk; I found a little creature jumping over my feet. I got scared for a moment, quickly came down, took a torch in my hand and climbed up back to the stairs.
    There, not to my surprise, a little frog had placed himself just at the corner of a step. At the ground level of my building, there is a good amount of greenery and in and around rainy season small and medium-sized frogs and toads are found hopping here and there but I was surprised how this little frog had reached such a height in the building. As it was dark in the stairs, so I threw light from the torch on his husky little form but he did not jump anywhere. Seeing him stationary I sat one step below him. I noticed, while my torch through its piercing light had been staring at his rumpled form, the little frog’s curious eyes were staring at me.

    Without the slightest sense of fear, he kept looking at me with a natural throbbing on his part of the body below his mouth, probably his throat. In fact, it was pounding strongly when I tried to touch him, he did not resist and only wiggled his head. His eyes still fixed on me, entire body steadfast, throbbing and beating still there in his throat. I switched on and off my torch several times to get him frightened but this brave frog was still staring at me stiffly with unfailing good spirits. Then clueless of what to do next to scare him, I came down, brought my phone with me to take some of his pictures.

    To my astonishment, after the first flash of my phone, when the first picture of the frog was captured, he suddenly tilted his body to the left… His head still looking towards the phone, his eyes now fixed on my phone camera.
    This way he was posing perfectly the right side of his body to my phone. I felt this behavior so strange and human-like that I kept cogitating for some time as if he was anticipating such a photoshoot. Then in a pleased mental state, I took a few more pictures, touched his head and the crusty surface of his back softly. This time he jumped quickly and disappeared in the dark towards the roof side.

    OK Now, I won’t irritate you further with my silly tale…but before talking anything about the book you have to read what I saw that night!

    --------
    A Dream
    --------
    I saw a dream then at night, a frog was hopping along with me, beside my sluggishly moving bare feet in the green dew filled morning grass in a park. When I bowed down to touch him, he hopped in such a dramatic and frightening way that in his first jump he crossed the entire park and with his next he just flew like a bird… high… high… and very high… up to the clouds… and then within a moment became a cloud. A white cloud....and then turned dark a moment later!

    ---------
    The Library
    ---------
    Next morning after having finished the daily work I went to the library, as I do frequently when I have time and reached the segment where the books of my taste are found in the shelves.
    The first book I picked was a bulky one. I read the title. I felt pleased and after sitting in my reading chair when I read the first story in the book, to my greatest surprise … I found the frog here again….Oh ! what a Froggy experience!
    The title was…“The Frog Prince or the Iron Henry”…and there was a frog in the story that talked like a man.

    When to get her ball from a deep spring, a princess, the most beautiful daughter of a king, takes help of this frog in the wild and promises him that she will allow him to stay with her and then after getting her ball back, she backs out and runs away to her palace.

    Then one day someone says at her door, this:

    “Open the door, my princess dear,
    Open the door to thy true love here!
    And mind the words that thou and I said
    By the fountain cool, in the greenwood shade.”


    Then the princess runs to the door and opens it, and there she sees the frog, whom she had quite forgotten.

    Now at this point in time, I remembered my frog as well and saw the pictures I had taken last night on my phone and then looked at the picture of a frog at the door of the princess, made on a page of this book.

    And I realized then...... Frogs are really powerful creatures ! I underestimated them !

    They can’t only hop around ..... they can guide you to your right next book read in a strange dreamy way as well! :)


    --------------
    The book Finally :)
    --------------
    OK!... So this was my fairy tale leading me to this book!

    Finally, let me say something about the book. A book with 210 fairy tales compiled in it by the Grimm brothers, Jacob, and Wilhelm in the early 19th century.
    It includes many tales, some of them you might have heard from your parents and grandparents in your childhood. Like...

    Cinderella, Snow White, Clever Hans, Girl without hands, Gossip wolf and the fox… etc.

    These tales are full of enchantment and rapture, terror and wisdom, tragedy and beauty. These stories are kept alive by German peasants of the time told around the fireplace to entranced listeners.
    This book has influenced people worldwide and is a principal source for artists and composers, who are re-creating these tales in new and innovative ways around the world.

    I did not read all the tales in this book, but the reading of 50 odd tales from this book educated me enough to alter my views that these tales were made for the children only!

    I think one must read these fairy tales to one’s children. However, the older people should read them twice because these are filled with such wisdom and simplicity that sometimes in the ruckus of life even one fairy tale from this book can fill your heart with childlike innocence and peace!

    This compilation is truly a legacy of vibrant oral tradition!

  • James

    I adored fairy tales as a child... wait, I've always adored them, even now when I'm... not a child... so many different interpretations -- truly the foundation for many of today's TV shows, movies, children's books... a must read! Who doesn't know the stories of Hansel & Gretel, Little Red Riding Hood, etc. These are powerful parables meant to teach us all the lessons we need. Of course, they're fun and imaginative. But their the basics to start from. Love them.

    About Me
    For those new to me or my reviews... here's the scoop: I read A LOT. I write A LOT. And now I blog A LOT. First the book review goes on Goodreads, and then I send it on over to my WordPress blog at
    https://thisismytruthnow.com, where you'll also find TV & Film reviews, the revealing and introspective 365 Daily Challenge and lots of blogging about places I've visited all over the world. And you can find all my social media profiles to get the details on the who/what/when/where and my pictures. Leave a comment and let me know what you think. Vote in the poll and ratings. Thanks for stopping by. Note: All written content is my original creation and copyrighted to me, but the graphics and images were linked from other sites and belong to them. Many thanks to their original creators.

  • Luís

    I love storytelling. I knew Grimm's Tales were far from cute Disney adaptations and often amoral.
    However, despite all the assets I had in hand, these Tales bothered me a lot. First, blame it on their often vain appearance, without moral, lesson, or teaching. I then read in the preface that their goal was not to educate or enlighten children but to show them that life will make up of trials, which will have overcome with the help of good people, luck, or persistence. Interesting, but I didn't get it at all.
    The harsh and often dull style didn't appeal to me, nor did the countless repetitions: how often will a character find himself alone in the forest at night? Be afraid of wild animals. And climb a tree to sleep? Knowing that, unless I am mistaken, there were lynxes in Brothers Grimm's Germany and that lynxes can climb trees. These Tales have many other repetitions: repeating words, sometimes entire paragraphs, repeating the horrible tortures and unworthy parents who abandon/sell/hurt their children, repeating the magic hat/horse/boots that make up the teleport, or turning everything into gold.
    Finally, the silly and cutesy side annoyed me. That's no happy ending to a marriage if it is incestuous or if the spouses have known each other for a quarter of an hour. A gaggle of semi-blind or idiotic characters who no longer recognize their relatives after a few months. Ridiculous turns of phrases like 'Little mirror darling' or Jeannot and Margot, who have always called (at least with me) Hansel and Gretel.
    Far from me pretending to judge the Brothers Grimm negatively, the Tales have rocked and will rock children's generations (unless they give them nightmares). They are part of our shared cultural heritage as a legacy of popular myths and traditions. It's just that they stayed close to me, except for some funny moments, for example, in front of Cinderella's stepmother, who cuts off her daughters' feet, or the tale that ends in a snub because the narrator has forgotten the rest of the story.

  • هدى يحيى

    ألتقط أنفاسي قليلاً
    أعود إلى سحر الطفولة المفقود في عالمي
    وأرخي أعصابي بين دفتي كتاب حكايات كبير


    أتذكّر أمي حين كنتُ في العاشرة .. السابعة .. الخامسة
    ورأسي على ذراعها الممدود قبل النوم ، تحكي لي كل ما توارثته عن أمها من حكايات عجيبة ‏كانت تثير خيالي النهم إلى عوالم كل شيء فيها ممكن

    أتذكر سقف غرفتنا المهدم
    كنت أرى في النتوءات الغريبة التي تركها الجير والأسمنت عالماً بأكمله
    وبينها تشكّلتْ أبطال القصص
    فكنتُ أصنع وجوهاً معبرة بخيالي تبتسم .. تصرخ .. تبكي
    وأذرع مفتوحة أو ضاربة أو ملوحة بالوداع
    وسيوف وملابس وأدوات تجميل

    يالله من هذا السقف الذي شهد سنوات من تخيلاتي قبل النوم وفي الصباح حين أصحو


    *********************

    الأخوان جريم من أهم المساهمين في إحياء التراث الألماني الأدبي واللغوي
    فلا تقتصر أهميتهما على جمع الحكايات الشعبيّة التي كانت التي (ترويها النساء الألمانيّات لأطفالهن حول المدافئ في البيوت والأكواخ)ء
    بل قاما بتعديلها وإضافة بعض جمل الحكايات الشهيرة من مثل
    كان يا مكان

    كما وضعا معجم جريم للغة الألمانية
    كانت بداية نشرهما للحكايات في عام ‏1812‏
    واستمرا في النشر على مدار أعوام مضيفين حكايات جديدة من تراثهم الشيق

    حكايات الأخوين جريم من أهم الحكايات الخرافية في التراث الإنساني
    وأنا سعيدة بقراءتها مجمعة في كتاب واحد احتجت للغوص فيه جدا في تلك هذه الفترة





  • Jaidee

    3.24180327 stars (pretty close to pi)- the average of tales of 89 to 210 as I lost the ratings of the first 88 stories

    2016 - The Most Fun (nest) Review to Write

    " The folk tale is the primer of the picture-language of the soul" -Joseph Campbell

    If the Grimms were around today this is the tale I would recount to them:

    In the near past in the kingdom of Toronto there lived a distinguished middle aged Duke. He was handsome, cool, level-headed and fastiduous. He lived in a grand apartment with his gray kitty but after two unhappy marriages was looking to reconnect with another nobleperson and attempt happiness once again. He decided to host a dinner and had three countesses scour the city for suitable candidates. These three countesses were lovely to Duke Xavier and wanted the best for him despite not being able to nab him for themselves. The third countess was especially sweet and asked the Duke if he would consider somebody more pedestrian but pleasant, devoted and a bit odd.
    Xavier looked at her sweetly and said "Why the hell not?"

    The dinner day arrived and the four suitors awaited in the lobby. First there was Sir Adonis. Sculpted like a greek god, with a face so handsome that both men and women fainted just by looking. Second there was Lady Haha. Fashionable, brilliant and cooler than her more famous relative Lady G...no we cannot say it. Thirdly there was Dame Cait....sophisticated, intelligent and a tigress in bed (by reputation really.) Lastly there was roly poly Jade. Not a prince or nobility and looked rather bashful in his maroon smoking jacket that his aunty picked out for him for this occasion.

    The three countesses came down to the lobby of the apartment and saw Lady Haha with her little poodle that had shat three times already on the marble. "Lady Haha...you cannot bring that beast into the sumptuous rooms. The Duke's gorgeous feline will have an epileptic fit" Well if Lady Poodle Rara is not welcome then I am off to find a king that will appreciate me" Off she huffed. Sir Adonis smirked. Dame Cait grimaced. Roly poly Jade quickly applied some lip balm and quickly smelled his armpits as he was oh so nervous.

    The countesses brought the three to the apartment and seated there in grey and mauve elegance was Duke Xavier. He greeted all warmly and then dismissed the three countesses to the kitchen to finish dinner.

    The Duke said "the first test is the talent show."

    Sir Adonis jumped up. He ripped open his shirt and started to pose. His biceps and triceps were oh so delicious and the three countesses were mesmerized at the sight. Duke Xavier snapped and said "Away ladies do not burn our dinner". Dame Cait said "Well I'm feeling rather moist now" Jade looked down at his roly poly stature and lost all courage.

    Dame Cait pulled out a long cigarette holder, lighted it. She then began to recite Virginia Woolf, Dante, Neruda, Aristotle, Rumi and even Anne Rice by rote memory. She did it with such class and with a british accent that was divine to listen to. Sir Adonis yawned. The three countesses were charmed and Jade headed for the door.

    Duke Xavier gently said. "Please do not go. Please share your talent" Jade looked up and said. "Duke Xavier do you happen to have a karaoke machine" The three countesses were prepared and slid one out on a very chic dolly.

    This is what roly poly Jade sang:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SdvZa...

    Sir Adonis yawned. Dame Cait grimaced. The three countesses melted. Duke Xavier got a glimmer in his beautiful sad brown eyes.

    Dinner was served. Sir Adonis took the choicest pieces of meat. Dame Cait criticized every dish. Roly poly Jade got gravy on his maroon smoking jacket and died of embarassment.

    Duke Xavier asked the last question of the evening and it was this: "How will you love me?"

    Sir Adonis answered the question with the question: "No Duke -how will you love me?"

    Dame Cait answered thoughtfully: "I will organize the nicest soirees, connect you to the most beautiful and intelligent people and spend your money in a thoughtful way so that I always look chic, desirable and you will be the envy of every nobleperson in the entire kingdom"

    Roly poly Jade uttered quickly: "I am not sure I can love you just like that. I will get to know you, comfort you and make sure that most of the time you are happy. If I do fall in love with you Duke Xavier I will remain devoted to you for the rest of your days. I will eat all your baked goods with relish, I will procrastinate on all the household chores, I will sing endlessly to you especially show tunes and songs from the 1980s. I will always have your best wishes at heart and take care of you and make you laugh. I am not beautiful. I am only semi-smart but my heart will always be open to you forever"

    The three countesses had tears in their eyes.

    Duke Xavier stood up and gave Sir Adonis a warm hug. He sweetly kissed Dame Cait on the lips.

    He held out his hand to roly poly Jade and said "Come on pumpkin, let's Rock"

    THE END.

  • Maureen

    The original Grimm's Brothers fairy tales were a far cry from the Perrault collection of many of the same stories, the Green Fairy Book by Andrew Lang, or, God forbid, Walt Disney. The Brothers Grimm told stories with meat on their bones, where the good people were heroes and the bad people were really, really bad. The outcome of a particular story rose and fell on the consequences of the actions of the characters. The evil stepsisters in Cinderella, for example, did not go to the wedding of Cinderella and the Prince - no - their eyes were pecked out by crows.

    Bruno Bettleheim had a theory that if children are reared hearing fairy tales and folk tales, they will develop a rich fantasy life while young, and won't need to turn to drugs and alcohol later on. I don't know if that is really the case, but I do know that the Grimm Brothers occupied an enormous space in my psyche as a child, along with Hans Christian Anderson and Carlo Collodi. No wonder children today love J.K. Rowling and Phillip Pulliam. Whatever else you think about their stories, their child heroes inhabit universes where actions are followed by consequences, and not all the good survive. Children are hungry for truth, and in books like Grimm's Fairy Tales, they find it.

  • El Librero de Valentina

    La mejor manera de acercarse a un clásico es con estos cuentos que tantas vemos visto en el cine, historias que hemos romantizado y que, aquí, se narran de una manera más real.

  • Piyangie

    I'm resigned to feeling differently about my childhood favourites now. I do realize that what I've read when I was young were either edited or abridged versions. And regarding Grimm's Fairy Tales, I think what I've read before is only a collection of fairy tales, which is heavily edited and rewritten, and not the complete compilation. I would have been in for a shock, had I not known the history pertaining to these writings. The knowledge that they weren't originally intended as children's tales and that it was only an attempt to study and preserve German folklore by the Grimm brothers helped me overlook certain prejudices and cruelties that filled many of these tales.

    My rating here is the overall average of 210 tales which I rated separately. It shows that many of the tales have been ordinary. There were only a small number of original stories and many were repetitions. Some had no meaning as stories and were boring to death. I only enjoyed about a quarter of the tales, and those were the popular ones. While reading this complete edition, I also read a few from the first volume of the original tales written by the Grimm brothers, and I must say that I liked the direct and somewhat unpolished tales more than the later rewritten refined ones. I have a mind to read the whole volume sometime later, for I feel I'll enjoy it more.

    Frankly, I enjoyed only about a quarter of the tales out of this complete collection. But I'm not disappointed. Those I enjoyed were the ones truly etched in my memory from childhood. It was nice revisiting them, for they certainly took me years back to the happier days.

  • Brad

    The Lessons of the Brothers Grimm

    The Golden Bird -- If you are the “Chosen One” you can eschew all advice, screw up constantly, and still come out on top.

    Hans in Luck -- Half-wits can be happy with anything.

    Jorinda and Jorindel -- You can trespass unreservedly, so long as “the Other” owns the land.

    The Traveling Musicians -- Robbing the rich to give to yourself is fine if your victim is a robber.

    Old Sultan -- Obey your master to the detriment of your friends, especially if your friends threaten your master’s property.

    The Straw, The Coal and The Bean -- Death is the funniest joke of all...and tailors are always nice.

    Briar Rose -- Disney can reduce anything -- even a story about slights and righteous indignation -- into a ninety minute indoctrination of the fantasy of good and evil.

    The Dog and The Sparrow -- Vengeance is fine if you are the first person wronged, but if you wrong one, then are wronged in return you may not seek vengeance -- even if the vengeance wrought upon you is out of proportion for your crime. This is also known as the “carpet bomb Afghanistan” fable.

    The Twelve Dancing Princesses -- Listen to whatever an old hag tells you because her ugliness must equal wisdom.

    The Fisherman and His Wife -- Be happy with your station in life. Ambition above your station cannot make you happy. Marx would love this one.

    The Willow-Wren and the Bear -- No matter the idiocy of a war and its cause, the defeated should pay reparations, regardless of how humiliating.

    The Frog Prince -- Spoiled, nasty, unlikable though one may be, if one is royalty and does what one’s father tells one, living happily ever after is one’s right, and one's inevitable destiny.

    Cat and Mouse in Partnership -- The meek will inherit nothing. They will be devoured. No idealism here.

    The Goose Girl -- The ideal wife should be meek and mild and of the right station. Also, beauty will out.

    The Adventures of Chanticleer and Partlet -- “How They Went to the Mountains to Eat Nuts,” “How Chanticleer and Partlet Went to Visit Mr. Korbes,” & “How Partlet Died and was Buried, and How Chanticleer Died of Grief:” Everyone dies, so live for yourself while you can.

    Rapunzel -- Vengeance thy name is woman, but if you’re a Prince everything works out in the end.

    Fundevogel -- If you’re going to be boiled by a crazy cook...run. Unless you are a shape shifter...of course.

    The Valiant Little Tailor --Make people believe you’re a bad ass and you’ll never have to prove it.

    Hansel and Gretel -- If you kill a “godless witch” you will be rewarded beyond the dreams of avarice, and if you are a father who abandons your children at the behest of your second wife but feel bad about it, you too will be rewarded. And if you catch the mouse you can make a hat out of it.

    The Mouse, The Bird and the Sausage -- Stick to your proper social roles or you will DIE!

    Mother Holle -- If you are ugly you must be lazy. If you are ugly and lazy you will be punished. Your punishment will be having your skin covered in pitch that will never come off, so according to the Grimm Brothers ugly = lazy = black skinned. Yikes.

    Little Red-Cap -- Listen to your mother because she is always right, and kill all the predatory wildlife you can because it will eat you otherwise. Oh, and if you are “devoured” by a wolf you can be cut out soon and revived.

    The Robber Bridegroom -- Never leave witnesses, and always check for missing body parts.

    Tom Thumb -- There’s no place like home is the stated lesson, but the real moral is that cheaters and crooks prosper.

    Rumpelstiltskin -- The rich and powerful do not have to honour contracts and agreements. That is the lot of the poor.

    Clever Gretel -- Lie your face off to protect the secret of your eating disorder and your alcoholism.

    The Old Man and His Grandson (possibly the best story in the tales; it’s certainly one of my favourites) -- Treat others as you’d like to be treated lest you be treated ill.

    The Little Peasant -- Lie, cheat, steal and commit murder, even mass murder, and you will flourish, so long as you are preying on the idiocy of your neighbours.

    Frederick and Catherine -- Dizzy blondes always prosper.

    Sweetheart Roland -- If you love your man and remain faithful, he’ll always come back to you, no matter his own unfaithful transgressions.

    Snowdrop (also known as Snow White and the Seven Dwarves) -- Creepy men will always come to the rescue of a too-young girl...if she is lovely enough.

    The Pink -- Apparently pink has always been the colour of homosexuality (of course, it could just be that I was feeling particularly gay when I read that night).

    Clever Elsie -- Divorce is as simple as a fowling net and bells tied around your moron spouse’s neck. At least if you are a Clever Hans.

    The Miser in the Bush -- Someone always pays.

    Ashputtel (aka Cinderella) -- The Brothers Grimm really made no sense at all, and they must have had a wicked step-mother of their own. These boys had issues.

    The White Snake -- Be kind to lesser beasts and you will some day be rewarded, but you can still kill any domesticated beasts indiscriminately.

    The Wolf and the Seven Little Kids -- Predators are evil and must die; prey are good and must live. Prey can also torture and kill predators whenever they want.

    The Queen Bee -- Be nice to animals and they will make you richer than Daffy Duck in the Genie's lair.

    The Elves and the Shoemaker -- Naked dwarf/elves make kick ass shoes.

    The Juniper Tree -- Killers should be killed, so their victims will be born again.

    The Turnip -- There is virtue in con artistry.

    Clever Hans -- THE BEST STORY EVER! The whole crew giggled their brains out at the escapades of Clever Hans. Of course, it could have been my silly Austrian accent. In fact, every Grimm Tale would be better with an Austrian accent.

    The Three Languages & Lily and The Lion -- Leave the fairy tales behind for a few days and they are totally forgettable.

    The Fox and The Horse -- Domesticated animals deserve much better than wild ones. Haven't I seen that somewhere before?

    The Blue Light -- It’s terrible for a Princess to be forced into menial labour. A capital offence, in fact.

    The Raven -- Useless men are the perfect men for a wronged princess.

    The Golden Goose -- Always feed homeless men, it’ll make you a King. And here I thought the most you could get from such a deed was a dipped ice cream cone.

    The Water of Life -- The good guys always win. Silly isn’t it?

    The Twelve Huntsman -- Sexism will always help a lady get her man.

    The King of the Golden Mountain -- Midgets and dwarves are nothing but magical. Bad people have black faces. Kings can steal anything they want. That's the Brothers Grimm in a nutshell.

    Doctor Knowall -- Idiots are fated to riches. See...there was ntohing new about
    Forrest Gump.

    The Seven Ravens -- Father’s are never responsible for their crimes against their children.

    The Wedding of Mrs. Fox -- First Story: Genetic anomalies are easy to overlook if you are a fox. Second Story: Racial purity must be maintained. Hey...weren't these cats German?!

    The Salad -- Turn a woman into an ass, and she will drop to her knees and do anything you want, making you happy forever.

    The Story of the Youth Who Went Forth to Learn What Fear Was -- The longer the story (or title) the more idiotic the moral.

    King Grisly-Beard -- Any shrew can be tamed.

    Iron Hans -- Cursed Kings will help any knob who can help them break their curse.

    Cat-Skin -- There are Kings everywhere, and they’re all looking for a Princess who wants to hide her Princessness. I am not sure that PETA would be impressed with this one.

    Snow-white and Rose-red -- Every talking animal is a Prince in disguise’ every pretty little girl is just waiting to be made a Princess; every dwarf is evil.

    So who comes out ahead in The Brothers Grimm Fairy Tales: The super rich, the rich, all nobility, the stupid, and cute animals.

    Who ends up looking bad: any woman who isn’t nobility, step-moms, dwarves, the poor. folks with dark skin.

    Yep, this book is crap. It is such crap that nearly every Disney adaptation is an improvement -- seriously. The last thing I can say, the thing I need to say, is YUCH. Yuch-yuchity-yuch-yuch-yuch!

    But Clever Hans...now that was awesome!

  • E. G.

    Note to the Expanded Second Edition
    Note to the Expanded Third Edition
    Once There Were Two Brothers Named Grimm, by Jack Zipes
    A Note on the Translation


    --1. The Frog King, or Iron Heinrich
    --2. The Companionship of the Cat and the Mouse
    --3. The Virgin Mary's Child
    --4. A Tale About the Boy Who Went Forth to Learn What Fear Was
    --5. The Wolf and the Seven Young Kids
    --6. Faithful Johannes
    --7. The Good Bargain
    --8. The Marvellous Minstrel
    --9. The Twelve Brothers
    --10. Riffraff
    --11. Brother and Sister
    --12. Rapunzel
    --13. The Three Little Gnomes in the Forest
    --14. The Three Spinners
    --15. Hansel and Gretel
    --16. The Three Snake Leaves
    --17. The White Snake
    --18. The Straw, the Coal, and the Bean
    --19. The Fisherman and His Wife
    --20. The Brave Little Tailor
    --21. Cinderella
    --22. The Riddle
    --23. The Mouse, the Bird, and the Sausage
    --24. Mother Holle
    --25. The Seven Ravens
    --26. Little Red Cap
    --27. The Bremen Town Musicians
    --28. The Singing Bone
    --29. The Devil With the Three Golden Hairs
    --30. The Louse and the Flea
    --31. The Maiden Without Hands
    --32. Clever Hans
    --33. The Three Languages
    --34. Clever Else
    --35. The Tailor in Heaven
    --36. The Magic Table, the Golden Donkey, and the Club in the Sack
    --37. Thumbling
    --38. The Wedding of Mrs Fox
    --39. The Elves
    --40. The Robber Bridegroom
    --41. Herr Korbes
    --42. The Godfather
    --43. Mother Trudy
    --44. Godfather Death
    --45. Thumbling's Travels
    --46. Fitcher's Bird
    --47. The Juniper Tree
    --48. Old Sultan
    --49. The Six Swans
    --50. Brier Rose
    --51. Foundling
    --52. King Thrushbeard
    --53. Snow White
    --54. The Knapsack, the Hat, and the Horn
    --55. Rumpelstiltskin
    --56. Sweetheart Roland
    --57. The Golden Bird
    --58. The Dog and the Sparrow
    --59. Freddy and Katy
    --60. The Two Brothers
    --61. Little Farmer
    --62. The Queen Bee
    --63. The Three Feathers
    --64. The Golden Goose
    --65. All Fur
    --66. The Hare's Bride
    --67. The Twelve Huntsmen
    --68. The Thief and His Master
    --69. Jorinda and Joringel
    --70. The Three Sons of Fortune
    --71. How Six Made Their Way in the World
    --72. The Wolf and the Man
    --73. The Wolf and the Fox
    --74. The Wolf and His Cousin
    --75. The Fox and the Cat
    --76. The Pink Flower
    --77. Clever Gretel
    --78. The Old Man and His Grandson
    --79. The Water Nixie
    --80. The Death of the Hen
    --81. Brother Lustig
    --82. Gambling Hans
    --83. Lucky Hans
    --84. Hans Gets Married
    --85. The Golden Children
    --86. The Fox and the Geese
    --87. The Poor Man and the Rich Man
    --88. The Singing, Springing Lark
    --89. The Goose Girl
    --90. The Young Giant
    --91. The Gnome
    --92. The King of the Golden Mountain
    --93. The Raven
    --94. The Clever Farmer's Daughter
    --95. Old Hildebrand
    --96. The Three Little Birds
    --97. The Water of Life
    --98. Doctor Know-It-All
    --99. The Spirit in the Glass Bottle
    --100. The Devil's Sooty Brother
    --101. Bearskin
    --102. The Wren and the Bear
    --103. The Sweet Porridge
    --104. The Clever People
    --105. Tales About Toads
    --106. The Poor Miller's Apprentice and the Cat
    --107. The Two Travellers
    --108. Hans My Hedgehog
    --109. The Little Shroud
    --110. The Jew in the Thornbush
    --111. The Expert Huntsman
    --112. The Fleshing Flail From Heaven
    --113. The Two Kings' Children
    --114. The Clever Little Tailor
    --115. The Bright Sun Will Bring It to Light
    --116. The Blue Light
    --117. The Stubborn Child
    --118. The Three Army Surgeons
    --119. The Seven Swabians
    --120. The Three Journeymen
    --121. The Prince Who Feared Nothing
    --122. The Lettuce Donkey
    --123. The Old Woman in the Forest
    --124. The Three Brothers
    --125. The Devil and His Grandmother
    --126. Faithful Ferdinand and Unfaithful Ferdinand
    --127. The Iron Stove
    --128. The Lazy Spinner
    --129. The Four Skilful Brothers
    --130. One-Eye, Two-Eyes, and Three-Eyes
    --131. Pretty Katrinelya and Pif Paf Poltree
    --132. The Fox and the Horse
    --133. The Worn-out Dancing Shoes
    --134. The Six Servants
    --135. The White Bride and the Black Bride
    --136. Iron Hans
    --137. The Three Black Princesses
    --138. Knoist and His Three Sons
    --139. The Maiden From Brakel
    --140. The Domestic Servants
    --141. The Little Lamb and the Little Fish
    --142. Simelei Mountain
    --143. Going Travelling
    --144. The Donkey
    --145. The Ungrateful Son
    --146. The Turnip
    --147. The Rejuvenated Little Old Man
    --148. The Animals of the Lord and the Devil
    --149. The Beam
    --150. The Old Beggar Woman
    --151. The Three Lazy Sons
    --152. The Twelve Lazy Servants
    --153. The Star Coins
    --154. The Stolen Pennies
    --155. Choosing a Bride
    --156. The Leftovers
    --157. The Sparrow and His Four Children
    --158. The Tale About the Land of Cockaigne
    --159. A Tall Tale From Ditmarsh
    --160. A Tale With a Riddle
    --161. Snow White and Rose Red
    --162. The Clever Servant
    --163. The Glass Coffin
    --164. Lazy Heinz
    --165. The Griffin
    --166. Strong Hans
    --167. The Peasant in Heaven
    --168. Lean Lisa
    --169. The House in the Forest
    --170. Sharing Joys and Sorrows
    --171. The Wren
    --172. The Flounder
    --173. The Bittern and the Hoopoe
    --174. The Owl
    --175. The Moon
    --176. The Life Span
    --177. The Messengers of Death
    --178. Master Pfriem
    --179. The Goose Girl at the Spring
    --180. Eve's Unequal Children
    --181. The Nixie in the Pond
    --182. The Gifts of the Little Folk
    --183. The Giant and the Tailor
    --184. The Nail
    --185. The Poor Boy in the Grave
    --186. The True Bride
    --187. The Hare and the Hedgehog
    --188. Spindle, Shuttle, and Needle
    --189. The Peasant and the Devil
    --190. The Crumbs on the Table
    --191. The Little Hamster From the Water
    --192. The Master Thief
    --193. The Drummer
    --194. The Ear of Corn
    --195. The Grave Mound
    --196. Old Rinkrank
    --197. The Crystal Ball
    --198. Maid Maleen
    --199. The Boots of Buffalo Leather
    --200. The Golden Key

    Religious Tales for Children

    --201. Saint Joseph in the Forest
    --202. The Twelve Apostles
    --203. The Rose
    --204. Poverty and Humility Lead to Heaven
    --205. God's Food
    --206. The Three Green Twigs
    --207. The Blessed Virgin's Little Glass
    --208. The Little Old Lady
    --209. The Heavenly Wedding
    --210. The Hazel Branch

    The Omitted Tales

    --211. The Nightingale and the Blindworm
    --212. The Hand With the Knife
    --213. Herr Fix-It-Up
    --214. How Some Children Played at Slaughtering
    --215. Death and the Goose Boy
    --216. Puss in Boots
    --217. The Tablecloth, the Knapsack, the Cannon Hat, and the Horn
    --218. The Strange Feast
    --219. Simple Hans
    --220. Bluebeard
    --221. Hurleburlebutz
    --222. Okerlo
    --223. Princess Mouseskin
    --224. The Pear Refused to Fall
    --225. The Castle of Murder
    --226. The Carpenter and the Turner
    --227. The Blacksmith and the Devil
    --228. The Three Sisters
    --229. The Stepmother
    --230. Fragments
    --231. The Faithful Animals
    --232. The Crows
    --233. The Lazy One and the Industrious One
    --234. The Long Nose
    --235. The Lion and the Frog
    --236. The Soldier and the Carpenter
    --237. The Wild Man
    --238. The Children of Famine
    --239. Saint Solicitous
    --240. Misfortune
    --241. The Pea Test
    --242. The Robber and His Sons

    Selected Tales from the Annotations of 1856

    --243. The Three Daughters and the Frog King
    --244. The Young Man Who Went Out in Search of Fear
    --245. The Golden Maiden
    --246. The White Dove
    --247. Fool's Gold
    --248. The Winter Rose
    --249. Prince Swan
    --250. The Short Tale

    Jacob Grimm's Tales

    --251. Snow White, Snow White, or The Unfortunate Child (1806)
    --252. Rumpenstunzchen (1806)
    --253. Stepmother (1806)
    --254. The Virgin Mary's Child (1806)
    --255. The Fox and Mrs Fox (1806)
    --256. The Moon and His Mother (1806)

    Published Tales

    --257. Good Bowling and Card Playing (1810), Wilhelm Grimm
    --258. The Fairy Tale About the Faithful Sparrow (1812), Jacob Grimm
    --259. The Little Tale About the Crawling Mouse (1812), Jacob Grimm
    --260. The Fairy Tale About the Tailor Who Came to Heaven (1818), Wilhelm Grimm
    --261. The Celebration of the Underground Creatures (1826), Wilhelm Grimm
    --262. The War of the Wasps and the Donkey (1853), Wilhelm Grimm

    Selected Tales from the Annotations of 1856

    --263. The Fool
    --264. Small People
    --265. The Luck of the Dumb
    --266. Little Kurt Bingeling
    --267. The Liar
    --268. The Lazy Ones

    Selected Tales From the Posthumous Papers of the Brothers Grimm

    --269. The Grateful Dead Man and the Princess Rescued From Slavery
    --270. The Faithful Wife
    --271. The Princess in the Coffin and the Sentry
    --272. St. Peter's Mother
    --273. Why Dogs and Cats and Cats and Mice Are Enemies
    --274. Why Dogs Sniff One Another
    --275. Sharp Ears, the Runner, the Blower, and the Strongman
    --276. The Little Mouse and the Little Sausage
    --277. King Ironhead
    --278. The Old Soldier and the White Horse
    --279. The Silver Poplar

    Notes
    Index

  • Ahmed  Ejaz

    Boldly ventured is half won.
    As always, Grimm Brothers didn't disappoint me. I enjoyed this tale more than I expected.

    OVERVIEW
    There is a princess who proclaims that whoever solves her riddle, she will marry him. Princess is 100% sure that nobody can solve it but a tailor solves it. In state of shock, Princess refuses to marry him and gives him another test to pass in exchange of marriage. She puts him in the cage of bear. If he stays alive all the night, princess will marry him.


    This tale was a fun read for me. It shows that no matter how much difficult a task is, don't be discouraged! There are many things we don't try. Because we think we can't do them. Because they seem impossible. I don't know about you guys but I feel this. Look at this tale, when the tailor was ordered to spend a night with bear, he could reject it. But he didn't. He didn't get discouraged. He tried it. And ultimately accomplished his goal by using his mind.

    Overall, it's great. I would recommend it.

  • Amelia

    Its hard to rate a book when they are filled with multiple stories where some are bad and some are good, hence why it has received a 3 stars

    I only really read the stories that I were interested in reading. Most of them, after a certain point, I didn't read.

    The ones that I did read I enjoyed.

  • tee

    The copy that I owned as a child had Anderson's stories on the reverse - UPSIDE-MOTHERFUCKING-DOWN. I know, right? Too rad for words? Why don't I own it anymore? I presume it just fell apart from the heady love affair that I had with it. I was besotted. Rapaciously smitten. If rapacious means what I think it does. I just wanted to climb in between the covers and love it good. With or without its consent. Maybe rapacious simply means greedy, which does just as good because I was greedy for it, like a fat kid who mixed butter and sugar together and ate it as a snack. Like I may or may not have done as a kid. Whilst reading Grimm's fairytales.

    I will love whoever buys me a copy of the version that I had as a child with undying gratitude. It had charm, mystique, it was chunky, fat, just the right size. Just like a good man. Nothing has lived up to it's magnificence since. Oh and the stories were good too.

  • Megan

    Do you know kids today don't know how gory fairy tales are? This is a travesty and will not stand while I am a teacher. While we were discussing Paul Bunyan this week I got sidetracked and started talking about how everything in fairy tales happens in threes. Like how in the original Cinderella the stepmother tries to trick the prince by cutting of portions of her stepdaughters feet to fit the shoe. The kids were all riveted and many asked "Where's that book with all the gross stories in it?" during SSR that day. I was thrilled to tell them it was this one. Grimm indeed.

  • Alexxy

    I tried. I tried so hard to read this book.

    I kept telling myself that I can do it. That they're all old fairy tales. That it's nice to know the origin of all those classic stories.

    But no. I just... I really can't do it anymore.

    They're all ridiculous, annoying, and so so so much boring.

    DNF (I'm not sorry)

  • Brooke — brooklynnnnereads

    For this collection, to appreciate each story I definitely recommend reading it over a longer duration of time. Take your time and space out reading between stories. Maybe even read only one story a day because the stories can become quite repetitive and dry.

    Specifically related to this edition, I wish that there were more illustrations and that they were placed more appropriately. There were a few illustrations but really only a handful considering the amount of short stories in this collection.

    As for the illustration placement, I think it would have been more appropriate for the illustrations to be placed at the beginning/end of each short story or within the accompanying short story instead of placed randomly throughout.

    If you like classic literature, you may like some of these short stories. It's interesting to see how these fairytales have been adapted and changed since their origin.

    ***Thank you to the publisher for supplying me with an ARC of this edition of classics via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review***

  • Ferdy

    This was a chore to read, I thought it would be brilliant and dark. Sadly, it was anything but, there was the odd moment of slight creepiness but that was about it. Out of the two hundred or so stories, there were only a few that stood out — the rest were all repetitive, it felt like I was reading the same story over and over. I was getting sick of the same themes, characterizations and dynamics used. The message throughout was that:

    -All stepmothers are bitter, jealous, evil, immoral, lazy and greedy.
    -Stepdaughters are always treated badly by their stepmothers and stepdaughters are always beautiful, and humble and good.
    -All ugly people are evil, only beautiful people are good.
    -Ugly people are cool with murder.
    -Insta-love will happen as long as the people involved are beautiful and/or royalty.
    -The youngest son who everyone thinks is dumb will always outsmart his evil older brothers and somehow become a prince/king.
    -Any character who does something good will be rewarded with all kinds of treasures.
    -Good girls have to be hard working, self-sacrificing, forgiving and humble. Otherwise they're unworthy of happiness.
    -Good will always conquer evil.

    Yea, I wouldn't recommend this to anyone, the stories aren't all that interesting, reading a few is more than enough to get the gist of the Grimm's brothers fairy tales.

  • C.B. Cook

    I wish I could review each and every story in this individually, but there are soooo many. All I can say is that this has given me quite a few story ideas and its also given me quite a lot of laughter... along with probably scarring me for life, as well. :P Some of those stories are creepy!

    And if anyone writes a fairytale retelling of The Straw, The Coal, and The Bean... let me know, because that will be HILARIOUS. ;)

  • رزی - Woman, Life, Liberty

    بالاخره این غول هزار و سیصد صفحه‌ای هم تموم شد...
    And I am SOOOO done with fairy freaking tales.

    چرا وقتی توی بچگی می‌خوندمشون، یکی جلوم رو نگرفت؟
    آخه این‌ها رو شب قبل از خواب بچه‌هات بخونی؟!

    Jeez, retellings seem to be doing just fine.

  • Isa.

    Tenía tiempo sin leer a los Grimm, desde que era pequeña y no tenía conciencia alguna sobre autores y las maravillas escondidas en sus letras.

    Me he leído una recopilación con varios de sus escrito, la mayoría si es que se puede decir. Y he quedado bastante entretenida. No me tomó demasiado tiempo terminarlo, supongo que esa es la magia detrás de los libros infantiles. Toman tan poco tiempo pero brindan una reflexión tremenda.

    Aunque debo recalcar que las decisiones tomadas por Blancanieves me tenían desesperada. Una y otra vez confiando en la anciana. Incluso llegué a tacharla de tonta. Pero bueno, eso no evitó que disfrutara de la fe y alegría infantil que las historias trajeron a mi corazón.

    Sin duda, de mis recopilaciones de cuentos favoritas.

  • Manybooks

    Although I still and absolutely do cherish and treasure my traditional paper book copies of Jakob and Wilhem Grimm's Kinder- und Hausmärchen (of which I own various versions in both hardcover and paperback and in both German and English translation), I do nevertheless consider this here massive e-book compilation of basically the vast majority of the Brothers Grimm's fairy and folklore output both amazing and indeed also and definitely of much potential academic interest and use. Containing not only the 1812, 1815 and 1857 editions of the Brothers Grimm's Kinder- und Hausmärchen, Delphi Saemltliche Werke von Brüder Grimm (Illustrierte) (and yes, the title is indeed a bit badly rendered into German, but the internal contents, they do shine) also features their Deutsche Sagen (German legends), Irische Elfenmärchen (a collection of Irish elf and fairy tales) and last but not least Deutsche Mythologie (Jacob Grimm's take on German/Norse mythology, which I have always wanted to read but which is often really rare and massively expensive to purchase as a paper, as a traditional dead tree tome).

    And while this collection, and while Delphi Saemtliche Werke von Brüder Grimm (Illustrierte) does not feature Jacob Grimm's linguistic and philologic work (which would have been nice, but which I also was in no way expecting), that MOST of his and his brother's folklore and mythologic oeuvre has indeed been included is truly not only awesome but personally also very massively appreciated (not to mention that the general set up of Delphi Saemltliche Werke der Brüder Grimm (Illustrierte) and especially the tables of contents are clearly and aesthetically pleasantly organised, and yes, also quite user friendly, which is especially a boon and a godsend if one is for example trying to compare and contrast the 1812 edition of the Kinder- und Hausmärchen with the latest, with the 1857 one).

    Highly recommended is Delphi Saemtliche Werke von Brüder Grimm (Illustrierte) and like all of the Delphi Classics e-book tomes also extremely cost effective to purchase and download as a Kindle, but with the necessary caveat that this collection is entirely in German and therefore, a decent level of fluency in the German language is in my opinion an absolute must. And yes indeed, Delphi Classiscs also offers Delphi Complete Fariry Tales of the Brothers Grimm (Illustrated), which contains four separate sets of English language translations from 1826 to 1912, as well as the 1857 final German language edition (but unfortunately, this latter e-book does not feature any of the Grimms' additional folkloristic work, such as the above mentioned Deutsche Legenden etc., as Delphi Complete Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm (Illustrated) only focuses on the Brothers Grimm fairy tale collections).

  • Daniel A. Penagos Betancur

    Creo que todos, por lo menos en Colombia; hemos crecido viendo los fines de semana en las mañana los capítulos una y otra vez de la serie Cuentos de los hermanos Grimm, algunos un poco diferentes a como nos los ha presentado Disney y otros como siempre los hemos imaginado. Lo cierto es que, más allá de ser cuentos simplemente escritos para niños, el trabajo de los Grimm es algo que siempre he admirado mucho.

    Jacob (1785-1863) y su hermano Wilhelm Grimm (1786-1859) fueron eruditos, filólogos, investigadores culturales, lexicógrafos y escritores alemanes que son mundialmente conocidos por haber compilado de manera escrita todos los cuentos conocidos en el folklore alemán. El interés de los hermanos por los cuentos tradicionales inició en la universidad donde comenzaron a investigar sobre la historia antigua de la literatura y el idioma alemán, incluidos los cuentos populares.

    Los hermanos establecieron una metodología para coleccionar y registrar por escrito historias populares que se convirtió en la base de los estudios del folclore. Entre la primera edición de 1812-1815 y la séptima y última de 1857, los Grimm revisaron su colección numerosas veces y la aumentaron de 157 a más de 200 cuentos. Un trabajo más que notable y que merecerá siempre una gran admiración de mi parte.

    El hecho de hacer una selección de todos los cuentos de una región no es algo que se les ocurrió únicamente a ellos, Elias Lönnrot hizo algo similar en Finlandia en el siglo XIX con su Kalevala que procuraba rescatar la tradición oral finesa; una obra tan notable como el Cantar de Hildebrando, Beowulf, las Eddas islandesas, el Cantar de los Nibelungos, el Cantar de Roldán, el Cantar de las huestes de Igor y el Cantar de mío Cid.

    Lo cierto es que, muchas de las historias compiladas por los Grimm distan mucho de ser aptas para niños, pues hay escenas bastante crudas que están muy alejadas de ser obra de un hada madrina o arte de magia como lo han hecho creer las versiones animadas hechas a lo largo de la historia. Si bien esto es un elemento con el cual los Grimm lucharon toda su vida, y que fueron sorteando en las sucesivas ediciones de sus compilaciones de cuentos no hay que dejar de lado que, en muchos de estos cuentos las cosas no pasan por la presencia de algún ser mágico, sino por pura justicia humana.

    La presente edición no tiene todos los cuentos compilados por los hermanos, pero sí algunos de los más emblemáticos de todos y los que nos vienen a la cabeza cuando se menciona el tema en algún lado. Me ha parecido bastante curioso que, por lo menos cuando de nombres raros se trata, cada cuento da el origen del nombre; algo que a veces en las versiones en pantalla de los cuentos se pierde.

    Un libro que para mí es indispensable tener o leer alguna vez en la vida; pues marca un punto importante en muchos de los conceptos que han vivido hasta nuestros días sobre las historias de brujas, princesas y animales dentro de los cuentos. Una obra que, como lo dije más arriba; dista mucho de ser completamente apta para niños, pero que encarna la naturaleza humana en todo su esplendor.

  • Fiorela

    Los originales! No son cuentos tan infantiles, algo macabros incluso.

  • LUNA

    Esta es la edición de alma ilustrada
    y me parece que tiene una muy buena selección aunque los dibujos me los esperaba mas bonitos pero por el precio esta muy bien.
    Por supuesto hay cuentos que me han gustado mas que otros pero en su mayoría me han gustado bastantes, además que mucho de ellos no los conocía que eso es de agradecer.
    en general es una muy buena recopilación

  • Nora

    I love fairy tales. I grew up with Disney's cute, timeless renditions of them. I think it's important to point out, though, that Disney definitely made the majority of these stories much more palatable. For example, in the original Sleeping Beauty, the prince basically rapes the princess while she's asleep and by the time she wakes up it turns out she's already had kids by him. In the original The Little Mermaid, the mermaid kills herself after seeing the prince marry a human girl. In the original Cinderella, the stepsisters cut off parts of their feet so they can fit in the glass slipper. It kind of worries me that these types of stories were considered children's stories in the days of yore.

  • Markus

    Grimms Märchen – Grimm’s Fairy Tales
    Wilhelm & Jakob Grimm (1785-1863)

    This work could be called „The Bible of German Fairy Tales”.

    It contains over two hundred stories:

    Der Froschkönig, Dornröschen, Hansel & Gretel, Das tapfere Schneiderlein, Der Wolf und die Sieben Geisslein, Die Bremer Stadtmusikanten, Frau Holle, Rapunzel, Rumpelstilzchen, Schneewitchen, Rotkäppchen, Tischlein deck dich, Goldesel und Knüppel Aus dem Sack;

    These are the ones every reader will recognize at once. Some have become famous around the World and made the fortune of Walt Disney. Many turned into movies.

    The tales are simple but contain essential human behavior, qualities, and failures, courage, and cowardice, loyalty and betrayal, Crime and Punishment, to quote Dostoyevsky.

    The prose style is surprisingly plain and transparent.
    However, after getting used to it, we are left with a soothing melancholy.
    In the end, even a little sadness, remembering the awes and wide-eyed childhood mysteries of the Christmas tree and little bells ringing out in the distance.

    Here is an easy recipe for fairy tales:
    We take the following ingredients:

    A poor farmer and his wife,
    A little girl, or two, two or three brothers growing up and yearning to see the world;

    An enormous dark and haunted forest;
    An ugly old witch in her haunted little dwelling;

    A beautiful and kind fairy watching over little children,

    The rugged high mountain and the castle;
    An old King and beautiful children, a princess and a prince;

    A frog, a duck, some geese, a cock and a hen, some turtle doves, a dog, some pigs, a donkey,
    a horse, slippery snakes, and a fire-spitting dragon.

    For spices, we need some sweetness and some bitterness, some tears and some smiling, some fights and huggings, some wounds and healing, some witchcraft and miracles, some sadness and happiness, plenty of food and drinks and some gold and silver as well.

    We write all these words on a piece of paper, we cut them out fold them up and pour them in a bowl and mix them well.

    Then we pick the words out one by one, place them randomly on a large white paper and fill the space in between with our imagination.

    There we are, ready with a new story for bedtime.

    Moreover, at his time I would like to wish all my reader friends

    Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

  • Jonnie

    I was gifted a lovely edition of this - which was incredibly thoughtful, since there was no occasion for it. So, this is a 'review' as much as it is a perfect bout of nostalgia for me. There are 211 tales in here so I'm not able to, nor would I want to comment on them all.

    Grimm's tales are known all over the world - Hanzel and Gretel, Rapunzel, Rumpelstiltskin, The Frog Prince - everyone knows these, right? What about The Old Beggar-Woman, One-Eye, Two-Eyes, And Three-Eyes, The White Bride And The Black One? I was a bit of a strange child in the sense that I was always fascinated by these beautifully dark tales. So as I peruse through this magical and beautifully bound book, I may make occasional comments on certain tales - and I hope that one day should you be curious enough, that you too pick up an unabridged copy of Grimm's Fairy Tales, and be as delighted as I am over these stories.

    ~

    1. The Frog-King, or Iron Henry
    I used to fervently argue that the Frog Prince was never kissed, but then again, not everyone had read the Grimm's version of this childhood classic. Boo-hoo to them, because Iron Henry is perfect!

  • Himanshu Karmacharya

    People say that magic isn't real. But is this what one thought while listening to bedtime stories and fairy tales during childhood? Those tales always left me astounded and in awe, like people after a magic trick.

    The Complete Grimms' Fairy Tales is a German collection of fairy tales by the Grimm brothers or "Brothers Grimm", Jacob and Wilhelm. It contains numerous stories some very popular and some not so much. Some famous tales include Hansel and Gretel, Cinderella/Ashputtel, Sleeping Beauty/Briar Rose, Little Red Riding Hood, Rapunzel, Snow White and many more. The Disney movies also played a major role in popularising them among the modern audiences. But these stories are very different from the Disney ones, these are much darker, with murder and mutilation in almost every other story.

    Reading some stories took me down the memory lane, but it was also amazing discovering some new stories that I liked and enjoyed. However not all of the tales are enjoyable; some are very boring, without any story construct and downright skippable.

  • Florencia

    Nunca dejé de leer cuentos infantiles. De vez en cuando, entre tanto Camus, tanto Borges, Kafka, sadasdsdaf, tengo la necesidad de salir de lo absurdo, lo opresivo, lo filosófico, la realidad, en definitiva... para volver a lo básico, a esa ingenuidad que caracteriza a la niñez, donde realmente crees en bosques mágicos y hermosas princesas que no hacen más que dormir hasta que su príncipe azul las despierta con el beso del amor verdadero aunque jamás las habían visto antes, y personajes con nombres que nunca podré pronunciar correctamente (¿Rumpelstiltskin?), y esas cosas. Espero nunca creerme tan estúpidamente superada como para dejar de leer cuentos. Es sano, y tengo a C.S. Lewis de mi lado.

    Jun 23, 2013
    * Also on
    my blog.