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Other editions of book A Wonder Book and Tanglewood Tales - Collector's Library of Famous Editions

  • A Wonderbook and Tanglewood Tales

    Nathaniel Hawthorne, Gustaf Tenggren

    Hardcover (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Aug. 1, 1934)
    A collection of Greek myths retold as fairy tales.
  • A Wonder Book and Tanglewood Tales

    Nathaniel Hawthorne

    Hardcover (Dodd, Mead & Co., Jan. 1, 1938)
    None
  • A wonder book and Tanglewood tales,

    Nathaniel Hawthorne

    Hardcover (The John C. Winston Company, Jan. 1, 1930)
    None
  • A Wonder Book and Tanglewood Tales

    Nathaniel Hawthorne

    Hardcover (Blurb, April 26, 2019)
    Tanglewood Tales for Boys and Girls (1853) is a book by American author Nathaniel Hawthorne, a sequel to A Wonder-Book for Girls and Boys. It is a re-writing of well-known Greek myths in a volume for children. The book includes the myths of: Theseus and the Minotaur (Chapter : "The Minotaur") Antaeus and the Pygmies (Chapter: "The Pygmies") Dragon's Teeth (Chapter: "The Dragon's Teeth") Circe's Palace (Chapter: "Circe's Palace") Proserpina, Ceres, Pluto, and the Pomegranate Seed (Chapter: "The Pomegranate Seed") Jason and the Golden Fleece (Chapter: "The Golden Fleece") Hawthorne wrote introduction, titled "The Wayside", referring to The Wayside in Concord, where he lived from 1852 until his death. In the introduction, Hawthorne writes about a visit from his young friend Eustace Bright, who requested a sequel to A Wonder-Book, which impelled him to write the Tales. Although Hawthorne informs us in the introduction that these stories were also later retold by Cousin Eustace, the frame stories of A Wonder-Book have been abandoned. Hawthorne wrote the first book while renting a small cottage in the Berkshires, a vacation area for industrialists during the Gilded Age. The owner of the cottage, a railroad baron, renamed the cottage "Tanglewood" in honor of the book written there. Later, a nearby mansion was renamed Tanglewood, where outdoor classical concerts were held, which became a Berkshire summer tradition. Ironically, Hawthorne hated living in the Berkshires.
  • A Wonder Book and Tanglewood Tales

    Nathaniel Hawthorne, Frederick Richardson

    Hardcover (Book on Demand Pod, Jan. 1, 1930)
    Greek tales retold in his own way by author.
  • A Wonder Book and Tanglewood Tales

    Nathaniel Hawthorne

    Hardcover (Easton Press, Jan. 1, 2001)
    None
  • A wonder book;: Tanglewood tales

    Nathaniel Hawthorne

    Hardcover (E.P. Dutton & co., inc, Jan. 1, 1933)
    None
  • A wonder book: And, Tanglewood tales

    Nathaniel Hawthorne

    Hardcover (E.P. Dutton, Jan. 1, 1937)
    None
  • A Wonder Book and Tanglewood Tales

    Nathaniel Hawthorne

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Aug. 24, 2017)
    A Wonder Book and Tanglewood Tales
    O
  • Wonderbook and Tanglewood Tales

    Nathaniel Hawthorne, Gustaf Tenggren,

    Hardcover (Houghton Mifflin Co., Jan. 1, 1938)
    None
  • A Wonder Book and Tanglewood Tales:The Washington Square Classics

    Nathaniel Hawthorne, Elinore Plaisted Abbott & Helen Alden Knipe

    (Macrae Smith Co., Jan. 1, 1925)
    None
  • A Wonder Book and Tanglewood Tales

    Nathaniel Hawthorne

    Paperback (RareBooksClub.com, Sept. 13, 2013)
    Excerpt: ...and spiteful; and glaring fiercely out of the blaze of the chariot, she shook her hands over the multitude below, as if she were scattering a million of curses among them. In so doing, however, she unintentionally let fall about five hundred diamonds of the first water, together with a thousand great pearls, and two thousand emeralds, rubies, sapphires, opals, and topazes, to which she had helped herself out of the king's strong-box. All these came pelting down, like a shower of many-colored hailstones, upon the heads of grown people and children, who forthwith gathered them up and carried them back to the palace. But King Ægeus told them that they were welcome to the whole, and to twice as many more, if he had them, for the sake of his delight at finding his son, and losing the wicked Medea. And, indeed, if you had seen how hateful was her last look, as the flaming chariot flew upward, you would not have wondered that both king and people should think her departure a good riddance. And now Prince Theseus was taken into great favor by his royal father. The old king was never weary of having him sit beside him on his throne (which was quite wide enough for two), and of hearing him tell about his dear mother, and his childhood, and his many boyish efforts to lift the ponderous stone. Theseus, however, was much too brave and active a young man to be willing to spend all his time in relating things which had already happened. His ambition was to perform other and more heroic deeds, which should be better worth telling in prose and verse. Nor had he been long in Athens before he caught and chained a terrible mad bull, and made a public show of him, greatly to the wonder and admiration of good King Ægeus and his subjects. But pretty soon, he undertook an affair that made all his foregone adventures seem like mere boy's play. The occasion of it was as follows: