Italian Fairy Tales by Lilia E. Romano

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Jacqueline Thursby

Abstract

Italian Fairy Tales, called a Wonder Book, was originally published before 1920, and it represents a sampling of Italian Folklore. This "original" collection of eleven stories filled with fairy magic, goblins, beautiful maidens, brave youths, giants, and exquisite Italian names ("Gennareillo," "Giovannion," "Luciella," "Filandoro," and "Cecella") is as refreshing as the perfume of orange groves and myrtle trees that figuratively waft through its pages. Maria Tatar remarked that fairy tales "circulate in multiple versions, reconfigured by each telling to form kaleidoscopic variations with distinctly different effects" (ix).1 As I read these stories, I found sparkling twists and gentle turns of familiar threads with "distinctly different effects."

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