Ellen Datlow has been editing sci-fi, fantasy, and horror short fiction for more than thirty years. She was fiction editor of Omni magazine and Scifiction and has edited more than fifty anthologies, including the annual Best Horror of the Year; Poe: 19 New Tales Inspired by Edgar Allan Poe; Darkness: Two Decades of Modern Horror; Lovecraft Unbound; Naked City: Tales of Urban Fantasy; Blood and Other Cravings; Supernatural Noir; Queen Victoria’s Book of Spells: An Anthology of Gaslamp Fantasy; and two YA anthologies: Teeth: Vampire Tales and After: Nineteen Stories of Apocalypse and Dystopia. She’s won nine World Fantasy Awards, plus multiple Locus, Hugo, Stoker, International Horror Guild, and Shirley Jackson Awards. She was the recipient of the 2007 Karl Edward Wagner Award, given at the British Fantasy Convention for outstanding contribution to the genre, and was honored with the Life Achievement Award given by the Horror Writers Association, in acknowledgment of superior achievement over an entire career.
Terri Windling has been a fiction editor for more than thirty years and has won many awards for her work. She has published more than forty anthologies (often in partnership with Ellen Datlow), as well as her own novels, children’s books, and nonfiction on fantasy, folklore, and mythic arts. She has won nine World Fantasy Awards, the Bram Stoker Award, and the SFWA Solstice Award for “outstanding contributions to the speculative fiction field as writer, editor, artist, educator, and mentor.” Her adult novel The Wood Wife won the Mythopoeic Award for Novel of the Year, her collection The Armless Maiden was shortlisted for the James Tiptree Jr. Award, and the YA anthology Teeth (co-edited with Ellen Datlow) was short-listed for the Shirley Jackson Award. A former New Yorker, Terri lives with her husband and daughter in a small country village in Devon, England.
“If there is a single person at the nexus of fantasy literature, it is Terri Windling—as writer, as painter, as editor, as muse.” —Jane Yolen
Swan Sister: Fairy Tales Retold
eBook
$7.99
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ISBN-13:
9781442460409
- Publisher: Simon & Schuster Books For Young Readers
- Publication date: 03/20/2012
- Sold by: SIMON & SCHUSTER
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 192
- File size: 2 MB
- Age Range: 8 - 12 Years
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Just as fairy-tale magic can transform a loved one into a swan, the contributors to this book have transformed traditional fairy tales and legends into stories that are completely original, yet still tantalizingly familiar
In the follow-up to A Wolf at the Door, thirteen renowned authors come together with a selection of new and surprising adaptations of the fairy tales we think we know so well. These fresh takes on classic tales will show you sides of each story you never dreamed of.
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Publishers Weekly
In Swan Sister: Fairy Tales Retold, ed. by Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling, 13 authors transform traditional fairy tales into original stories. "The Girl in the Attic" by Lois Metzger follows a lonely, silent 14-year-old girl who hides away in an attic room, in a story with parallels to Rapunzel. In "Lupe," by Kathe Koja, a girl enters the dark woods and bravely faces a wolf and a mysterious witch, in a retelling of Little Red Riding Hood. Jane Yolen, Bruce Coville and Neil Gaiman are also among the contributing authors in this companion to the editors' previous collection, A Wolf at the Door. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Children's Literature
This fascinating collection of classic stories-retold pairs each new story with a brief recollection by the author of where or how the inspiration for the story appeared, thus introducing the reader to the fun of playing with story. For example, Jane Yolen's story of magic first love sprang from the tales of the Greenman, but she moves her Greenman from the old country to the new...and magical havoc as well as teenage bliss follows. Other stories also explore the aspects of love; a dethroned prince fulfills three tasks to rescue the beautiful princess hidden in the tiny Golden Fur; a young neighbor girl becomes the last of Bluebeard's wives and lives with the knowledge of hidden death. Others introduce the complexity of story: Will Shetterley's edgy "Little Red and the Big Bad" explains "there's uno problemo," no ending, but for sure "one dies. One lives to tell the tale," thus moving the reader to confront the basic question of story and storyteller. Using classic tales as a springboard and language and story as their medium, the writers and editors create fun and fantasy for the reader. 2003, Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, Ages 8 to 12. Elisabeth Greenberg
School Library Journal
Gr 4-8-In this anthology, noted children's and adult fantasy writers play with the bones of traditional stories, songs, and characters to create 13 vibrant, imaginative short stories. Bruce Coville, Nina Kiriki Hoffman, Neil Gaiman, Tanith Lee, and Jane Yolen are among the contributors. In the tales, the fisherman and his wife are viewed from across the water by a lonely motherless girl; fairies give Sleeping Beauty a century of time to explore the world before she wakes up and settles down; Lupe, in her mother's red cape, faces down the wolf. Some stories are set in the folkloric past, others weave in contemporary details such as harried urban life, computers, and cell phones with pleasing results. The final moving story, Katherine Vaz's "My Swan Sister," based on Hans Christian Andersen's "The Wild Swans," presents a family introducing their new baby, who is attached to an oxygen tank, to all of the pleasures of their New York neighborhood before she dies in the unfinished jacket her sister has knitted. The author says, "Rachel was a real little girl who did not live long, but-pretty as a swan, light as a feather-she managed to remind my family that even when time runs short, even when we cannot speak, we can still work wonders." There's something for everyone in this anthology, which proves once again the immense flexibility of traditional tales in the hands of gifted storytellers.-Susan Hepler, Burgundy Farm Country Day School, Alexandria, VA Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
Thirteen new stories along the lines of those in the editors’ Wolf at the Door (2001), several by the same authors. Some tales stick closely to recognizable fairy tales, others are original creations that incorporate folkloric elements: Will Shetterly offers an urban, open-ended "Little Red and the Big Bad," Neil Gaiman’s poem "Inventing Aladdin" captures the pressure on Scheherazade, Gregory Frost’s "Harp That Sang" is a prose rendition of the "Cruel Sister" ballad. Lois Metzger’s redemption of the stepmother in her Rapunzel-like "Girl in the Attic," and Pat York’s tale of a wish-granting fish caught by a child who is wise beyond her years, aren’t the only pleasant surprises that lurk here for readers up on their folktales. The collection ends on a strong note with Katherine Vaz’s title tale about a child learning from her short-lived baby sister that joy is not measured by time. Despite perfunctory author’s comments at each story’s end, an above-average gathering. (introduction) (Short stories. 11-14)