Image of West indian folk-tales

Non-Fiction

West indian folk-tales



As a child, Philip Sherlock loved to listen to folk tales. Since then he has made a significant contribution to Caribbean folklore by recording many of them in print for the first time.
Here are fables of the birds and animals of the West Indies: jaguar, snake, crested curassow, wild pig, parrot, wise owl, and of Anansi--the spider who can assume human form.
These twenty-one stories are a wonderful mixture of early tales from the Arawak and the Carib people, the original inhabitants of the Caribbean, and from the Ashanti people of West Africa. Read together they help to provide a background to the history of the West Indies. The stories are retold
here in a warm, rich style--some tales gentle and philosophical, some humorous and full of action.


Availability

ITBRC00785398.09729 SHENon FictionAvailable
ITBRC00786398.09729 SHE wNon Fiction (UPL)Available
ITBRC01227398.09729 SHENon FictionAvailable
ITBRC01348398.09729 SHENon FictionAvailable
ITBRC10647398.09729 SHENon FictionAvailable
ITBRC22609398.09729 SHENon FictionAvailable

Detail Information

Series Title
Oxford Myths and Legends
Call Number
398.09729 SHE w
Collection Type
Non-Fiction
Publisher Oxford University Press : Oxford.,
Collation
151p.: ill.; 14x21.5cm
Language
English
ISBN/ISSN
0192741276
Classification
398.09729
Edition
-
Subject(s)
Specific Detail Info
-

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