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A Jornada de Arasmon book cover
A Jornada de Arasmon
2023
First Published
3.79
Average Rating
38
Number of Pages
Não conseguiam deixar de chorar, pois nunca haviam escutado nada mais belo do que a voz dela.Chrysea e Arasmon, um casal de músicos viajantes, encantam todos os lugares por onde passam com suas vozes magníficas. Um dia o casal chega até uma aldeia amaldiçoada por um mago e Chrysea, na tentativa de libertar a aldeia, sofre com o feitiço dos elfos.Desolado sem saber onde está sua amada, Arasmon procurará incansavelmente por sua esposa em todo o reino tendo apenas uma encantadora harpa de ouro como companhia.A Jornada de Arasmon é um doce e emocionante conto de fadas escrito por Mary de Morgan, uma autora fundamental na evolução do conto de fadas literário.
Avg Rating
3.79
Number of Ratings
19
5 STARS
21%
4 STARS
42%
3 STARS
32%
2 STARS
5%
1 STARS
0%
goodreads

Author

Mary De Morgan
Author · 5 books

Mary De Morgan (24 February 1850 – 1907) was an English writer and the author of three volumes of fairytales: On A Pincushion (1877); The Necklace of Princess Fiorimonde (1880); and The Windfairies (1900). These volumes appeared together in the collection The Necklace of Princess Fiorimonde – The Complete Fairy Stories of Mary de Morgan, published by Victor Gollancz Ltd in 1963, with an introduction by Roger Lancelyn Green. Though De Morgan is one of the lesser known authors of literary fairytales, her works, heavily influenced by Hans Christian Andersen, are remarkable in deviating from the fairytale norm – often not including a happy ending, or not having the protagonist gain wealth or power (rather procuring the wisdom of recognising the value of living without these things); and in the satirical element of political comment in her works. According to the Greenwood Encyclopedia of Folk Tales and Fairy Tales, the fairytales of Mary de Morgan played a "comprehensive and central role" in her era in the evolution of the literary fairytale. Her story, The Toy Princess, was featured on the BBC children's TV show Jackanory in 1966, and the same story featured on Jackanory Playhouse in 1981. It has been suggested that her gender plays a part in her relative obscurity, and that she is deserving of far more acclaim. Her brother, potter, tile designer and novelist William de Morgan, illustrated her first volume.

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