Imagine H.P. Lovecraft's story "The Call of Cthulhu" re-written as children's verse, and illustrated in the style of Dr. Seuss, and that's a pretty good description of R.J. Ivankovic's book. If that concept interests you, this book will too. The verse is at times a bit awkward, but not horribly so. The artwork is of uniform high quality. It makes for a fun ten-minute revisiting of Lovecraft's story. Ivankovic did a follow-up volume, H.P. Lovecraft's Dagon, which I'll have a look for.
Thursday, September 28, 2023
Thursday, September 7, 2023
Russian Secret Tales, by Aleksandr N. Afanasyev
Aleksandr Afanasyev was the major nineteenth-century collector of Russian folk and fairy tales. Unlike other collectors such as the Brothers Grimm, Afanasyev also collected bawdy folktales, though these are much less known that his fairy tales. Russian Secret Tales: Bawdy Folktales of Old Russia is one such collection translated into English. It first appeared in 1966, and was reprinted, with a new foreword by folkorist Alan Dundes, in 1996. The volume contains some seventy-four tales, some very short, others longer and presented in variant versions. The tales are ribald and quite fun. My favorite in the whole collection is "A Crop of Prickles" --yes, prickles are what you think they are; the translation for the most part avoids what might be considered obscene terms in English (so we occasionally read of two people futtering, or one getting futtered, etc.). Some of these tales are quite imaginative. In "A Crop of Prickles" two farmers are planting their respective fields with rye, but when asked by a traveler what they are planting, one farmer tells the truth, while the other lies and says he is planting prickles. And that is the crop he reaps, and when harvested produces comic results.
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