.
If one cannot enjoy reading a book
over and over again,
there is no use in reading it at all.
- Oscar Wilde
WE'RE TALKIN' BOOKS, ILLUSTRATIONS AND ART!
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“The Swiss Family Robinson” by Johann D. Wyss.
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One of the world’s best-loved stories of shipwreck
and survival, The Swiss Family Robinson portrays
a family’s struggle to create a new life for themselves
on a strange and fantastic tropical island.
Blown off course by a raging storm,
the family—a Swiss pastor, his wife,
their four young sons, plus two dogs and
a shipload of livestock—
must rely on one another in order to adapt to
their needs the natural wonders of their exotic
new home. Inspired by Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe,
this classic story of invention and adventure has fired
the imaginations of readers since it first appeared in 1812.
"The time has come," the Walrus said,
"To talk of many things:
Of shoes - and ships - and sealing wax -
Of cabbages - and kings -
And why the sea is boiling hot -
And whether pigs have wings."
in 'The Walrus and the Carpenter’
Alice in Wonderland
It is the mark of a good fairy-story,
of the higher
or more complete kind,
that however wild its events,
however fantastic or terrible the adventures,
it can give to child or man that hears it,
when the “turn” comes,
a catch of the breath,
a beat and lifting of the heart,
near to
(or indeed accompanied by) tears,
as keen as that given
by any form of literary art,
and having a peculiar quality.
by JRR Tolkien
“The Hereford Cathedral Chained Library
is an interesting one!
The practice of chaining books was the normal
practice for reference libraries starting in the
Middle Ages until the 18th century.
The Chained Library has been
around since the 1100′s.
MORE INFO HERE!
Instantly they lay still, all turned into stone.
An Arthur Rackham illustration for
The Two Brothers in Little Brother, Little Sister
Source
In fairy tales,
Everything beautiful is golden and strewn
with pearls; there are even golden people living there;
misfortune, by contrast, is a dark power,
a horrid cannibalistic giant who is, however,
vanquished,
since a good woman who knows just how to avert
misfortune stands ready to help.
These narratives always end by opening the prospect
of boundless happiness.
Evil is also neither inconsequential
nor something close to home, and not something
very bad,
to which one could become accustomed,
but something terrible, black, and wholly alien that you
cannot even approach; the punishment
of evil is equally
terrifying: snakes and poisonous reptiles devour their
victims, or the evil person dances to death
in red-hot iron shoes.
by Wilhelm Grimm,
Preface to the first edition of Kinder und Hausmärchen
Art by Caspar David Friedrich
It would be nice if
something made sence for a change.
by Alice
Enjoy your
Wonderful
and
Sunny Weekend ;o)
There once was a young Prince who had so
many and such beautiful books,
that he could find them anything he wished
to know except where the Garden of Paradise was
to be found, and this was just what he wished most
to know. When he was a very little boy,
just beginning to go to school, his grandmother
told him that every flower in the Garden of Paradise
tasted like the sweetest cakes, and that the
stamens were full of the choicest wines.
On one flower there grew history,
on another geography, on a third tables;
so that whoever ate the flower immediately knew
his lesson; the more he ate, the more he learned
of history, geography, or arithmetic.
READ THE WHOLE STORY HERE!
‘The Garden of Paradise’
- Hans Andersen’s Fairy Tales
Art by Letizia Picuno
--"I can't explain myself, I'm afraid, sir," said Alice,
"because I'm not myself, you see."
--"I don't see," said the Caterpillar.
--"I'm afraid I can't put it more clearly,"
Alice replied very politely,
"for I can't understand it myself top begin with;
and being so many different sizes in
a day is very confusing."
--"It isn't," said the Caterpillar.
(in Alice in Wonderland)
I’d give all wealth that years have piled,
The slow result of Life’s decay,
To be once more a little child
For one bright summer day.
~Lewis Carroll, “Solitude”
Art by Jessie Willcox Smith
1950 - author A.A. Milne's son, Christopher Robin,
sitting at home with his teddy bear.
Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS
All of the Original Pooh Characters Together
At Last in New York City in their permanent home
at The New York Public Library.
These are the very animals Christopher once
played with in Ashdown Forest (inspiration for
the Hundred Acre Wood), patches, rips, dirt,
and all. Some characters, like Rabbit and Owl,
were made up for the stories,
while little Roo was lost long ago.
Read more.
“The more that you read,
the more things you will know.
The more that you learn,
the more places you’ll go.”
~Dr. Seuss
Photo from the movie
“Miss Potter"
M D Spooner illustration
From Wynken , Blynken and Nod
by Eugene Field
~LINK~
In fact, the Red Shoes are never tired.
They dance her out into the street,
they dance her over the mountains and valleys,
through fields and forests, through night and day.
Time rushes by, love rushes by, life rushes by,
but the Red Shoes go on.
READ THE WHOLE STORY HERE!
art unknown to me!