Folklore

So I came across three books that I personally would classify as folklore...
There’s :
The Knight and the Dragon
Previously
The Rabbit and the Turtle Aesop’s Fables

First up is The Rabbit and the Turtle. Eric Carle recreated Aesop’s fables making them his own with the words and illustrations, but keeping the lesson/moral. Simple enough this type of folklore is called fables.

Next we have Previously. This book by Alan Ahlberg and Bruce Ingman is a story about what happened before Goldilocks went into the woods and entered the Bear’s house, ate their porridge, broke their chair, laid in their beds, got caught, and fled. This is where the part comes in about what I “personally” would classify as a folktale. I would call this a fractured fairy tale because it includes the storyline of the Goldilocks and the three bears but goes in to falling aboit what exactly Goldilocks  was doing before the story as we know it.

Last is The Knight and the Dragon. I would classify this particular story as a folktale. The story begins with once upon a time and is about a Knight and a Dragon who spend their time preparing to face one another off in a duel. The story has magical elements (fire breathing dragon), a person (Knight) as one of the main characters, and it even included a lesson at the end. It’s not a classic folktale, but in my opinion it could be classified as one or maybe even a fractured fairy tale.






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