Tag Archives: myth

J.C. Holt’s Robin Hood, and Stephen Knight’s Robin Hood: A Complete Study of the English Outlaw

Take no scorn to wear the horn It was the crest when you were born Your father’s father wore it And your father wore it to Robin Hood and Little John Have both gone to the fair o and we … Continue reading

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Jane Louise Curry’s Robin Hood and his Merry Men, and Robin Hood in the Greenwood

Rebecca Swain wrote this review. These hardcover retellings of the traditional Robin Hood legend are geared for children 9-12. While I feel that children over the age of 10 might find these books too young, I do think they are … Continue reading

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Scott Lynch-Giddings’s A Fancyfull Historie of That Most Notable & Fameous Outlaw Robyn Hood

Jessica Paige wrote this for Folk Tales. A Fancyfull Historie of That Most Notable & Fameous Outlaw Robyn Hood doesn’t wait until you’re done gasping for breath from saying the title to let you know what you’re in store for: … Continue reading

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Theresa Tomlinson’s The Forestwife, and Child of the May

Laurie Thayer wrote this review for Folk Tales, the predecessor of Green Man Review. In the early years of the 1990s, Robin Hood and his Merry Men enjoyed something of a renaissance. For a time, there was a spate of … Continue reading

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John Matthews’ (with Caitlin Matthews) The Winter Solstice: The Sacred Traditions of Christmas

Ye of weak or uncertain faith, enter not herein. For herein lies the dispelling of many myths and legends, or at least the ancient origins of the traditions we now associate with the winter holiday season. John Matthews has set … Continue reading

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Robert Holdstock’s Celtika, and The Iron Grail: Books One and Two of the Merlin Codex

On the strength of this beginning novel of a new series, Robert Holdstock is attempting to tie together almost everything he has written since the British Science Fiction Award winning Mythago Wood, weaving together all the threads of Western mythology … Continue reading

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Christopher Moore’s Lamb

When we first meet the Son of God, he’s a young boy with a lizard in his mouth. He takes the lizard out, hands it to his younger brother, who plays with it for a while, then mashes its head … Continue reading

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Alan Moore’s Promethea: Book One

If you don’t know Alan Moore, you don’t know modern fantasy. At least, you don’t know vibrant, witty, sexy, brutal, erudite, mind-blowing, cutting-edge modern fantasy. And you certainly don’t know comics. Alan Moore is the author of the exhaustively researched, … Continue reading

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Jules Watson’s The Swan Maiden

The Irish legend of Deirdre would seem to be ideal material for grand opera, full of romance, passion, high honor and deadly betrayal. Burdened at birth with a druid’s prediction that she will be extraordinarily beautiful but bring bloody doom … Continue reading

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Neil Gaiman’s Odd and the Frost Giants

This slim, whimsical YA novel is Neil Gaiman’s contribution to World Book Day 2008, one of nine £1.00 children’s books made available for this event. Though written for a younger audience, Odd and the Frost Giants is an entertaining read … Continue reading

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