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The Legend of Sleepy Hollow and Other Stories (Dover Thrift Editions)

door Washington Irving, Janet Baine Kopito (Redacteur)

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Among the first -- and best-loved -- tales by an American writer, "Rip Van Winkle" and "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" marked the entry of Irving into world literature. This modestly priced anthology also includes such well-known works as "The Devil and Tom Walker," "The Spectre Bridegroom," and more, 15 short stories in all.… (meer)
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Toon 3 van 3
Legend Of Sleepy Hollow: Loved this one to pieces, had all the images from the Disney cartoon in my head while reading and made up a few more.

Westminster Abbey: It read like a eerie Halloween tour brochure for an abbey. Maybe I missed something there.

Mountjoy: Hmmmmmm, I liked it for the imagery and the fanciful youth but it just left me hanging in the end

The Spectre Bridegroom: I thought this one might be a bit complicated for a younger audience, but I liked it OK enough.

The Mutability Of Literature: This was fun, I never would have thought seriously about a talking book.

The Wife: I have read terrible things about this one but I enjoyed the happy ending.

Update:
I finally finished them all, I didn't realize that some of the stories were from another book.
I very much enjoyed those tales though and now am on the lookout for other Irving material, overall I liked it because I was exposed to his other works which I had no idea existed. ( )
  LGandT | Feb 5, 2018 |
It's been a long time since I had the pleasure of sitting down and reading pieces of literature written in a time before these last couple of decades, and this one did not disappoint. Mind you, while I'm reading this for my American Literature of the 19th Century class (English Major~ Who'd have guessed it~), it's a really delicious experience to be able to put down the more rampant outlandish stories that so often capture the minds of the youths today and read something that was trying to establish--for the very first time in our history as a country--a train of literature that could be truly called "American." For that single reason, it's a little taste of wonder to go back to these several short stories that became such well known legends in our culture (some that I admit I never knew of as well~) and see what people wrote on the brink of our beginnings as a nation.

Yet even to put aside the relationship of this small book's worth in the development of a nation and its establishment of a strain of literature all its own, this is a really fun and enjoyable piece of fiction to read. It's refreshing to put aside all the fantasies that we're used to hearing about, and the pathetic attempts at portraying romance in some "cool" and "sexy" (more like "redundant and grotesquely pathetic") way, and just enjoy plain works that have elements of all of the above and more. Adventure, mysticism, the passing of ages, the call and devotion of love, the fits of passion and miscarriage of rage~ There are so many HUMAN and wonderfully engaging themes to this little collection of stories written by Washington Irving! You don't have to like all of them, but each of them has its own little world and fanciful, charming tale that it weaves for you, easily and quickly fretting you along its bends and easygoing ways.

Irving's work is not difficult to read, for all that his language does give away its age at times. His works are for the most part simple and to the point, with the exception that he--like many of the characters he writes--tend to get carried away on whims of fancy and completely engulf themselves in their own passions. *Laughs* But it's an enjoyable thing in every story! Even when I found myself rolling my eyes or shaking my head, I still read the story, because each one of them contained a smidgeon of something that captured my interest and kept me going just a little bit further. His plots are all quite simple to follow. There's nothing bewildering or confusing, even though most of them have a few mysterious elements thrown in there for a while. But most of those are unraveled before long, and the one time he took me on a journey from one story to another to another, only to shock me with a surprise ending in finding the stories were all related, I was awed with wonder at how he expertly swung all these seemingly unrelated tales fully around and linked them together to form a delightful loop! He is, if nothing else, a masterful executor of language, and his storytelling, whether the subjects seem to be up your alley or not, is almost continuously enjoyable!

In just under two hundred pages, we get thirteen different stories, and I must say that while some dragged a little, there were quite a few that really caught the imagination or spoke to the emotions and the engaged mind! Irving has a spectacular manner of making things that can be so dated still remain absolutely charming outside their time period, and it is only emphasized by my playful attitude while reading his works. While more than a few of them carry a message, and some beautifully philosophize, we still have that amiable storyteller sitting there before us, telling us his tales of all kinds, yet never losing that same enjoyable quality that made this such a pleasant read. And just for the record, my favorite stories would have to be "Rip Van Winkle," "The Mutability of Literature," "The Wife," and then the string of stories that all lead into one another: "Adventure of the Mysterious Stranger," "The Adventure of My Uncle," "The Adventure of My Aunt," and lastly "The Story of the Young Italian." *Laughs* Seven out of thirteen! Guess I really did enjoy this read for the greater part! And these are only the ones that I loved! The others were still really enjoyable too!

It's a fun read, guys. If you're looking for something a little out of the century and common themes, and you're into legends and old folklore (or things from the 19th Century~), then definitely pick this little book up. It's a read that teaches you while you enjoy it, and your vocabulary and mind will thank you for it~! You can so easily have fun with these simple tales, and engage with what's going on. Was it super-spectacular and amazing to me? Not just quite~ But was it a great read regardless? Yeah, it definitely was. :3 Come on! Check it out! A hundred and seventy pages can't hurt you! People read absolute DIRT that's twice as long as that and only zaps brain space instead of increasing it. *Chuckles* Take up this book definitely. It's a skip and a trip~! I think you'll enjoy it as much as I did! ^__^ At the very least, I sure do hope so~! ( )
  N.T.Embe | Dec 31, 2013 |
I've wanted to read the Legend of Sleepy Hollow for quite some time, so when I found this book at a good price I had to buy it. I guess I should have made my homework before picking this up: The Legend of Sleepy Hollow is a very short story, from where Tim Burton took the generic idea, and expanded it. It is quite nice, but it was a surprise as it is very different from the movie. Basically, the characters are there, the place is the same, the lore of the place is the same, but Ichabod Crane's backstory and what really happens is different.

Some of the other stories in this book were very nice: Rip Van Winkle was amusing and fairytale like, The Spectre Bridegroom was eerie but very sweet, The Wife was simply sweet and romantic, Adventure of a Mysterious Stranger and The Story of the Young Italian were very good and tragic, and The Mutability of Literature, although not really a story, was interestingly actual, although it relates with the printing press. Here's a quote:

"But the inventions of paper and the press have put an end to all these restraints. They have made every one a writer, and enabled every mind to pour itself into print, and diffuse itself over the whole intellectual world. The consequences are alarming. The stream of literature has swollen into a torrent—augmented into a river-expanded into a sea. "

What would have Irving said about the Internet, if he could only see it?

The other stories (Mountjoy, Adventure of the German Student, The Adventure of my Uncle, The Adventure of my Aunt, The Devil and Tom Walker) were not so good, most of the time boring and seeming to drag for ages. Westminster Abbey was especially boring, and I almost skipped it ahead because I hardly could read a paragraph at a time without my mind drifting to a much more interesting topic.

I liked Irving's writing style, a third-person that is not detached from action, with a somewhat conversational style. It seemed like he was telling me a story. This alone made the good stories great, and the not so good, enjoyable at least in a language level.

A complaint I have about this edition is: Why did they separate the stories Adventure of a Mysterious Stranger and The Story of the Young Italian when they are obviously parts of the same? The Adventure of my Uncle and The Adventure of my Aunt were not separated, and their connection is far more tenuous.

Final Opinion: It was an OK book; some good stories, some bad, one awful.

Also at Spoilers and Nuts ( )
  quigui | Jun 30, 2010 |
Toon 3 van 3
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» Andere auteurs toevoegen

AuteursnaamRolType auteurWerk?Status
Washington Irvingprimaire auteuralle editiesberekend
Kopito, Janet BaineRedacteurprimaire auteuralle editiesbevestigd

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According to WorldCat, ISBN 0486466582 contains the following stories:

The legend of Sleepy Hollow (1820) --
Rip Van Winkle (1820) --
The spectre bridegroom (1820) --
The mutability of literature (1820) --
Westminster Abbey (1820) --
The wife (1820) --
Mountjoy (1820) --
Adventure of the German student (1824) --
Adventure of the mysterious stranger (1824) --
The adventure of my uncle (1824) --
The adventure of my aunt (1824) --
The story of the young Italian (1824) --
The Devil and Tom Walker (1824)
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Canonieke LCC

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Wikipedia in het Engels

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Among the first -- and best-loved -- tales by an American writer, "Rip Van Winkle" and "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" marked the entry of Irving into world literature. This modestly priced anthology also includes such well-known works as "The Devil and Tom Walker," "The Spectre Bridegroom," and more, 15 short stories in all.

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