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Books with author Iona Opie

  • The Oxford Book of Children's Verse

    Iona Opie, Peter Opie

    Hardcover (Oxford University Press, May 17, 1973)
    A chronologically arranged anthology of 332 selections spanning five hundred years of American and British poetry, from Chaucer to Ogden Nash. Includes source and biographical notes.
  • The Oxford Book of Children's Verse

    Peter Opie, Iona Opie

    Paperback (Oxford University Press, June 13, 2002)
    This anthology brings together the outstanding verse written for children over a period of five hundred years. It contains more than 300 poems written by 123 authors, and includes the rhymed precepts of medieval times, the admonitory verse of Elizabethan Puritans, the inspirational verse of Blake and Christopher Smart, the nonsense verses of Edward Lear and Lewis Carroll, the nursery verses of Robert Louis Stevenson and A. A. Milne, and the poetical imaginings of Christina Rossetti, Eleanor Farjeon, and Walter de la Mare. It has truly been called "A companion to the mature of all ages, no matter how young."
  • Tail Feathers from Mother Goose: The Opie Rhyme Book

    Iona Opie

    Hardcover (Walker Books, Sept. 29, 1988)
    The Feathers From Mother Goose
  • The Classic Fairy Tales

    Iona Opie, Peter Opie

    Hardcover (Oxford University Press, June 1, 1974)
    Everyone has at one time been inspired or enchanted by fairy tales, with their evil witches, pure princesses, heroic princes, and happy endings. Yet over the years, most of these popular tales have undergone many transformations, as editors and storytellers have shortened and sentimentalized them, as well as slanted them to suit the demands of the time. Now reissued, Iona and Peter Opie's magnificent The Classic Fairy Tales, presents twenty-four of the best-known fairy tales in their original written form. Drawing on years of expertise, the editors provide introductions to each fairy tale, tracing the development of each story and noting points of interest. We learn, for example, that in a 17th century version of "Sleeping Beauty", the prince actually raped the princess in her sleep. Goldilocks, it turns out, evolved from the little old woman of the original story into a young girl. Little Red Ridinghood was actually eaten by the wolf, and in an early version of the "Frog Prince," the princess had to sleep with the frog to free him from his spell. With classic tales from the likes of Charles Perrault, the Brothers Grimm, and Hans Christian Andersen, and the works of such famous illustrators as Gustav Dore, Kate Greenaway, and George Cruikshank, The Classic Fairy Tales brings to life the charm and beauty of these timeless favorites.
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  • The Oxford Book of Children's Verse

    Iona Opie, Peter Opie

    Paperback (Oxford University Press, April 13, 1995)
    The outstanding verse written for children over the past five hundred years has been assembled here. More than three hundred pieces by 123 named authors, a fifth of them American, are arranged chronologically, from Chaucer and Lydgate to T.S. Eliot and Ogden Nash. Notes on the authors deal in particular with the poems included here.
  • I Saw Esau- Iona and Peter Opie with Maurice Sendak - 1st Limited Signed Edition

    iona-opie

    Hardcover (Candlewick Press, Jan. 1, 2006)
    This is a limited edition of 350 signed and numbered copies. It is a collection of traditional school children's poems and riddles illustrated (most in color) by the late, incomparable Maurice Sendak and presented in a slipcased hard cover format.
  • Puffin Book of Nursery Rhymes

    Iona Opie

    Paperback (PENGUIN BOOKS, Jan. 1, 1963)
    None
  • Here Comes Mother Goose

    Opie Iona

    Hardcover (Candlewick Press (MA), Oct. 6, 1999)
    Hard cover children's book,
  • The Singing Game

    Iona Opie, Peter Opie

    Hardcover (Oxford University Press, July 18, 1985)
    This volume, based on thirty years of collecting and research by two pioneers in the field of children's lore and language, presents hundreds of singing and clapping games popular with children since the Middle Ages, including such favorites as "Pop Goes the Weasel," "Lazy Mary Will You Get Up?," "Skip to My Lou," "The Muffin Man," and "Ring a Ring o' Roses." Serving as an exposition of both the workings of folklore and the perennial ways of young children left to play on their own, The Singing Game categorizes over 150 of these games into groups such as "Matchmaking," "Wedding Rings," "Cushion Dances," "Witch Dances," "Calls of Friendship," "Eccentric Circles," "Buffoonery," and "Clapping." The Opies provide a detailed, historical description of each game, as well as a vivid, firsthand account from one of its most recent practitioners on the playgrounds and backstreets throughout England. Demonstrating how the games have evolved over the years, and how they vary from country to country, this book offers a comprehensive, authoritative history of a universal folk genre. Beautifully illustrated throughout, it contains photographs, lithographs, and prints; the words to each game as well as the music for many of them; footnotes; a bibliography; a general index; and an index of songs, games, and dances.
  • Mother Goose's Little Treasures

    Iona Opie

    Hardcover (Walker Books Ltd, Oct. 1, 2007)
    None
  • Oxford Book of Childrens Verse

    Iona Opie

    Hardcover (BOOK CLUB ASSOCIATES, March 15, 1971)
    None
  • The Singing Game

    Iona Opie, Peter Opie

    Paperback (Oxford University Press, June 30, 1988)
    This volume, based on thirty years of collecting and research by two pioneers in the field of children's lore and language, presents hundreds of singing and clapping games popular with children since the Middle Ages, including such favorites as "Pop Goes the Weasel," "Lazy Mary Will You Get Up?," "Skip to My Lou," "The Muffin Man," and "Ring a Ring o' Roses." Serving as an exposition of both the workings of folklore and the perennial ways of young children left to play on their own, The Singing Game categorizes over 150 of these games into groups such as "Matchmaking," "Wedding Rings," "Cushion Dances," "Witch Dances," "Calls of Friendship," "Eccentric Circles," "Buffoonery," and "Clapping." The Opies provide a detailed, historical description of each game, as well as a vivid, firsthand account from one of its most recent practitioners on the playgrounds and backstreets throughout England. Demonstrating how the games have evolved over the years, and how they vary from country to country, this book offers a comprehensive, authoritative history of a universal folk genre. Beautifully illustrated throughout, it contains photographs, lithographs, and prints; the words to each game as well as the music for many of them; footnotes; a bibliography; a general index; and an index of songs, games, and dances.