Reviews

Myths and Folk Tales of Ireland by Jeremiah Curtin

khamz's review against another edition

Go to review page

Every myth is very repetative and feels like the same story with different names.

nigellicus's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

Fairy tales, or rather fairy stories, if that's a distinction meaningful outside of my own head, about sons and daughters and Fionn, who is a son, and the things they do, fighting giants, playing games of chance and always losing the third, stealing clothes from magician's daughters who change into swans, fighting the armies of the king of Spain, outwitting hags, getting a hell of a lot of wise and/or magical help to see them through their adventures, marrying up and making out like bandits. The repetitions and similarities grate at first, but soon the tales work their magic and you feel the rhythm and the cadences, the comfort of the familiar patterns and things that aren't so much repeated as shared. Alien to a modern audience, not really prose and certainly not poetry, artifacts of a different time and yet the very stuff our dreams are made of.

qui's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

This is an awesome book of Irish tales, including some typical fairy tales, and some stories based off the Fin McCool (however that's spelled) cycle. They didn't seem to be the...uh...canon stories for McCool, but they were pretty fun to read, if a bit repetitious in parts.
More...