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Rating probably due to my reading it in the wrong context/frame of mind. I think my brain just failed to get in the right gear for it.


 
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kephradyx | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 20, 2017 |
I know almost nothing about South American mythology, so it was wonderful to explore Tupinamba folklore through this 16th-century set novelette. It had a fun adventure-genre feel, with friendship, shape-shifting, and a fox that I absolutely adored.
 
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ladycato | Nov 27, 2016 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Member Giveaways geschrieben.
Nice little story.I think it's meant for younger readers, but i also enjoyed it.
 
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jenny_acc | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 4, 2016 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Member Giveaways geschrieben.
Colonial Brazil in the 1500s, monsters, folklore, fantasy, friends, all in one entrancing short story that leaves you looking for more!
**I won this book from a LibraryThing.com giveaway**
 
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jetangen4571 | 3 weitere Rezensionen | May 22, 2016 |
Poc aporta aquest conte de 40 pàgines sobre un noi que vol explorar la jungla del Brasil a l'època dels conquistadors i que allibera un esclau per a què l'acompanyi. S'intueix màgia i personatges curiosos, però només s'intueixen. A un preu "desorbitat" (1 €/40 pags) pels estàndards Amazon, i sense cap ganxo en particular, no repetirem.
 
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arnautc | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 23, 2016 |
Something of an interesting premise, The Faery Taile Project apparently wants to retell fairy tales in something of a witty fashion, and while part of this idea is good, I don't know that this is pulled off all that well. The first book in this series retells the story of Little Red Riding Hood. Told in two sections as a flip book, one half of the book is Lobo's Tale, or the Wolf's story, by Christopher Kastensmidt, and he casts the Wolf as a redneck moron. That's the best that I can come up with. The Wolf blunders through the story, obviously trying to do anything to get Red to pay attention to him, as he is totally smitten with her. The flip side of the book is Red's Tale, by Jim C. Hines. This story is fairly well told (in this story, Red works for the fairy tale mafia and uses the wolf's idiocy to her advantage and we see how the events in Lobo's Tale relate back and forth with her story), but I'm thinking that Kastensmidt wrote his part first, and Hines then had to mold his story to fit, so I think if left to his own devices, Hines could have crafted something really witty with this story, but did the best he could with the story he had to work with. Not something that would lead me to read any more of the books in the "series."
 
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tapestry100 | Jan 2, 2010 |
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