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4 Works 544 Members 5 Reviews

Works by Carolyn McVickar Edwards

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Common Knowledge

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female

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Reviews

"Each of these tales celebrates the return of the sun, and the book’s pleasing size and format increases its appeal. In Part 1, stories of the theft of light, from Raven to the Indian continent’s golden earring to the Miwok’s why the hummingbird has a red throat are told. In Part 2, The Surrender, the story of Loki and the death of light is linked with the Chinese tale of how the cock got his red crown. In Part 3, The Grace, the African tale of the girl who married the sun illuminates the Italian tale of La Befana, the old woman who carries sweets to each child as she searches for the infant savior. The introductions are respectful and strive mightily to see the overarching and very human unities to these tales. Rituals and games for solstice time and a rewriting of familiar carols to be less Christmas-centered and more New Age do not always ring true, but the bibliography includes Web sites as well as numerous old and new sources. Useful in particular for tracing how ancient the celebration of the year’s turning is, and how deep in the human soul." www.kirkusreviews.com… (more)
 
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CDJLibrary | 3 other reviews | Dec 7, 2022 |
Beautiful cover and illustrations by Kathleen Edwards. Without these would lack the fourth star. I enjoyed the stories one by one around the solstice.
 
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Ma_Washigeri | 3 other reviews | Jan 23, 2021 |
The book didn't have what I was looking for, but I did enjoy reading the different stories about light and the world.
 
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scote23 | 3 other reviews | Mar 30, 2013 |
This is a collection of 13 very short stories taken from all around the world, folklore and mythical tales explaining lunar cycles and the origin of the moon. These stores can be incredibly enlightening, I've read similar collections of stories from single countries or religions such as The Snow Lion's Turquoise Mane by Surya Das, but having a collection of stories from such a wide variety of cultures about the same topic is effectively enlightening.

Also, the text and the spacing in the book are enormous and there are practically as many blank pages as there are ones with text, so a book of 13 stories that are a few pages each manages to stretch into a 150+ page book. It reads more like a 50-75 pager.… (more)
 
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Ape | Dec 20, 2011 |

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Associated Authors

Kathleen Edwards Illustrator

Statistics

Works
4
Members
544
Popularity
#45,827
Rating
4.0
Reviews
5
ISBNs
8

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