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The Book of Elves and Fairies for Story-Telling and Reading Aloud and for the Children's Own Reading cover

The Book of Elves and Fairies for Story-Telling and Reading Aloud and for the Children's Own Reading

Chapter 3: ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
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About This Book

This volume gathers an international assortment of fairy tales, elfin legends, and wonder-tales retold for storytelling, reading aloud, and children's independent reading. It presents episodes of little folk, fairy rings, enchanted hills, household spirits, and magical treasures drawn from diverse traditions, and intersperses poems and fresh translations. The selections favor accessible language, omit needlessly terrifying or morally confusing passages, and include an index and notes to help storytellers use tales for delight, ethical examples, and imaginative development.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Special acknowledgment is here made to the Saturday Magazine of the New York Evening Post for use of many stories included in this volume, which I have written for its columns.

Grateful acknowledgment is due also to the following publishers for material from their books:—

To Messrs. Houghton Mifflin Company, for “The Sick-Bed Elves,” from Strange Stories from the Lodge of Leisures, by George Soulié; “The Brown Dwarf of Rügen,” by John Greenleaf Whittier; “The Immortal Fountain,” and “A Little Knight and Little Maid,” by Lucy Larcom.

To Messrs. E. P. Dutton & Co., for “Little Niebla,” from The Purple Land, by W. H. Hudson.

Thanks are due to Mrs. Anna Todd Paddock for “Timothy Tuttle and the Little Imps,” and to Miss Julia Fish for the French stories specially translated for this volume.

F.J.O.