Pages: 260 (Hardcover) Reading Level: Ages 9-12 ISBN: 0192745301 Pub: Oxford University Press Pub date: 1982-09-30 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 566306
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Reader Reviews:Superb storytelling (17/17 people found this helpful)I haven't enjoyed a book as much as this in ages - equally suitable for children and adults alike. The author makes superb use of language and metaphor to give an authenic Arabian feel whilst still making the stories read naturally. The frame story of Shahrazad is well handled and evolved and most of the short interspersed poems are pretty good also. I haven't read any other versions of the tales, but they would have to go some to beat this - I'm off to check out some of McCaughrean's other titles This book is the most marvelous book i have ever read! (7/15 people found this helpful)This book is a wonderful book ,it talks about a beautiful daughter of an old wazeer who worked for a cruel king called Shahrayar ,Shahrayar use to kill every girl he merried the next day ,but Shahrazad was too smart for him ,she read him a story every night for one thousand night and managed to survive for that long.....until.. Great version for older kids - and adults, too (19/19 people found this helpful)This is one of the better versions of these stories in my opinion, and is particularly suitable for older children who are ready to move beyond simple children's stories. The stories are a bit "straighten up" for contemporay audiences, but they retain the language and the fanatastic elements that people turn to these Tales to enjoy. The stories also retain some of the violent and cruel plots twists of the original, another reason you may not want to use these as bedtime stories for little children. All the major stories and most of the minor ones are included, and the "frame story" of the Shah and his clever wife is carried throughout the book very nicely. Each story told by Shahrezade serves a secondary purpose of advancing the tale of the royal couple's evolving relationship, and so the ending is more truly satisfying than in almost any other version of the Arabian Nights. The illustrations are good as well, and add to the storyland feeling of the tales. (The only quibble I have hear is with the white European look of most of the characters in the drawings.) Arabian Nights Rules! (5/11 people found this helpful)This story is one of the coolest versions of the tales told by Shaharazad to Shariar! It has at least 25 stories and they are all really good, especially the story of Ala-al-din. Buy This Book!!!!!!! Similar ProductsKalilah and Dimnah Ali Baba and the Stolen Treasure (Greatest Adventures in the World) Sheep Don't Go to School: Mad and Magical Children's Poetry of Eastern Europe CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> Study Books -> Schools -> Key Stages 1-4 -> Key Stage 2 -> Humanities & Social Sciences
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