欧宝娱乐

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袣褉械褋邪谢芯

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袟薪邪屑械薪懈褌械 袗薪写械褉褋械薪褨胁褋褜泻械 芦袣褉械褋邪谢芯禄 鈥� 薪邪泄薪芯胁褨褕邪 泻薪懈卸泻邪, 锌褉芯褨谢褞褋褌褉芯胁邪薪邪 薪械锌械褉械胁械褉褕械薪懈屑 屑邪泄褋褌褉芯屑 褍泻褉邪褩薪褋褜泻芯褩 泻薪懈卸泻芯胁芯褩 谐褉邪褎褨泻懈 袙谢邪写懈褋谢邪胁芯屑 袆褉泻芯屑 鈥� 胁芯谢芯写邪褉械屑 锌芯褔械褋薪懈褏 屑懈褋褌械褑褜泻懈褏 褌懈褌褍谢褨胁, 锌械褉械屑芯卸褑械屑 薪懈蟹泻懈 锌褉械褋褌懈卸薪懈褏 胁懈褋褌邪胁芯泻. 袙褨写 械泻褋锌褉械褋懈胁薪懈褏 褨, 褟泻 蟹邪胁卸写懈, 褎褨谢褨谐褉邪薪薪懈褏 褨谢褞褋褌褉邪褑褨泄 袆褉泻邪 蟹邪斜懈胁邪褦 写褍褏.

袙械谢懈泻懈泄 褎芯褉屑邪褌 泻薪懈卸泻懈 写邪褋褌褜 蟹屑芯谐褍 写芯褋褏芯褔褍 薪邪褌褨褕懈褌懈褋褟 斜械蟹泻芯薪械褔薪懈屑懈 褦褉泻褨胁褋褜泻懈屑懈 芦屑褨薪褨邪褌褞褉邪屑懈 胁 屑褨薪褨邪褌褞褉褨禄, 蟹胁芯褉褍褕谢懈胁芯褞 谢褨褉懈泻芯褞 褨 谢械谐泻懈屑懈 卸邪褉褌邪屑懈... 袨褉懈谐褨薪邪谢懈 褉芯斜褨褌 (芯泻褉褨屑 写胁芯褏 芦薪械写芯褌芯褉泻邪薪懈褏禄) 褉芯蟹屑械褌械薪褨 胁褨褌褔懈蟹薪褟屑懈 褨 蟹邪泻芯褉写芯薪薪懈屑懈 泻芯谢械泻褑褨芯薪械褉邪屑懈 褖械 写芯 锌芯褟胁懈 泻薪懈卸泻懈...

24 pages, Hardcover

First published May 8, 1835

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1964 people want to read

About the author

Hans Christian Andersen

7,345books3,456followers
Hans Christian Andersen (often referred to in Scandinavia as H.C. Andersen) was a Danish author and poet. Although a prolific writer of plays, travelogues, novels, and poems, Andersen is best remembered for his fairy tales. Andersen's popularity is not limited to children; his stories 鈥� called eventyr, or "fairy-tales" 鈥� express themes that transcend age and nationality.

Andersen's fairy tales, which have been translated into more than 125 languages, have become culturally embedded in the West's collective consciousness, readily accessible to children, but presenting lessons of virtue and resilience in the face of adversity for mature readers as well. Some of his most famous fairy tales include "The Little Mermaid", "The Ugly Duckling", "The Nightingale", "The Emperor's New Clothes" and many more. His stories have inspired plays, ballets, and both live-action and animated films.

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5 stars
635 (22%)
4 stars
1,028 (35%)
3 stars
913 (31%)
2 stars
247 (8%)
1 star
63 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 346 reviews
Profile Image for Melissa (Semi-hiatus for Work).
5,044 reviews2,951 followers
October 20, 2021
This is an interesting short fairy tale-esqe story. It is reminiscent of Aladdin/Ali Baba tales, but it is also unique in that it is mostly full of grey areas, rather than being the black/white or good/evil of most fairy tales. It's a bit creepy, and as I read a review of it earlier today I decided to check it out.

I really loved the ambiguousness of the tale, not knowing whether I should like the soldier or not. Overall this is a thought-provoking story that I've been thinking about for a couple of hours since completing it.
Profile Image for 賮丐丕丿.
1,098 reviews2,239 followers
June 6, 2018
鬲氐賵乇 讴賳蹖丿 賵賯鬲蹖 丿丕乇蹖丿 丕夭 噩賳诏 亘乇 賲蹖 诏乇丿蹖丿貙 蹖賴 倬蹖乇夭賳 鬲賵蹖 噩丕丿賴 亘賴鬲賵賳 賲蹖诏賴: 亘乇賵 鬲賵蹖 丕蹖賳 诏賵丿丕賱貙 賴乇 趩蹖 禺賵丕爻鬲蹖 胤賱丕 亘乇丿丕乇貙 賵賱蹖 蹖賴 賯賵胤蹖 賮賳丿讴 噩丕丿賵蹖蹖 丕賵賳噩丕爻鬲貙 丕賵賳 乇賵 亘乇丕賲 亘蹖丕乇.
卮賲丕 賲蹖乇蹖丿 賴乇 趩蹖 賲蹖 禺賵丕蹖丿 胤賱丕 亘乇 賲蹖 丿丕乇蹖丿貙 賯賵胤蹖 賮賳丿讴 乇賵 賴賲 亘乇 賲蹖丿丕乇蹖丿 賵 賲蹖丕蹖丿 亘蹖乇賵賳. 亘丕 禺賵丿鬲賵賳 賲蹖诏蹖丿: 趩乇丕 亘丿賲卮 亘賴 倬蹖乇夭賳賴責 倬爻 賲蹖 夭賳蹖丿 倬蹖乇夭賳 乇賵 賲蹖 讴卮蹖丿 賵 禺賵丿鬲賵賳 賮賳丿讴 乇賵 亘乇 賲蹖 丿丕乇蹖丿.
亘毓丿 賲蹖 乇蹖丿 亘賴 卮賴乇貙 毓丕卮賯 卮丕賴夭丕丿賴 賲蹖 卮蹖丿. 亘丕 丕爻鬲賮丕丿賴 丕夭 賯賵胤蹖 賮賳丿讴 噩丕丿賵蹖蹖貙 卮丕賴 賵 賲賱讴賴 賵 丿乇亘丕乇蹖 賴丕 乇賵 賲蹖 讴卮蹖丿貙 賵 亘丕 卮丕賴夭丕丿賴 丕夭丿賵丕噩 賲蹖 讴賳蹖丿.
賵 賲毓賱賵賲 賳蹖爻鬲 亘賴 趩賴 丿賱蹖賱蹖貙 亘賴 噩丕蹖 丕蹖賳 讴賴 亘賴 噩乇賲 丿賴 倬賵賳夭丿賴 賮賯乇賴 賯鬲賱 毓賲丿 賲丨讴賵賲 亘卮蹖丿貙 亘賴 賯賴乇賲丕賳 丿丕爻鬲丕賳 讴賵丿讴丕賳 亘丿賱 賲蹖卮蹖丿. /-:

倬 賳:
賵賱蹖 丕賳氐丕賮丕賸 丿丕爻鬲丕賳 禺賵卮賲夭賴 丕蹖 亘賵丿. ((:
Profile Image for Sean Barrs .
1,121 reviews47.5k followers
February 22, 2016
I love the fairy tales by Hans Christian Anderson, I think there really quite enchanting. The Tinderbox is one of the short tales in this edition and it depicts the life of a greedy, and quite cunning, solider. A witch has tasked him with fetching her tinderbox from a well, as a reward he gets to keep the silver that has been hidden with it. But, he decides to keep the box for himself and to slay the witch. He later discovers that the box is magical and can summon three dogs to do the holders bidding, so no wonder the witch wanted it back.

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Indeed, he orders them to fetch him a princess in which he is arrested for by her farther. He uses his cunning to try and save himself. I like the Tinderbox; however, I don鈥檛 think it is the best of the fairy tales in this edition. I don鈥檛 feel that the story has an overall morale or meaning like some of his other tales. Indeed, the Nightingale is a much more memorable tale, and the one I think this edition should have been named after. That has a clear cut meaning the reader can interpret and understand rather than a story that just happened for no particular reason.

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Also in this edition are several other fairy tales such as The Red Shoes, The Princess on the Pea and a couple of others. I think this is a good selection of his work, and it contains my personal favourite (The Nightingale.) If you鈥檝e never read any of his work then this is a good place to start. My four star rating of this reflects my opinion of the overall pieces together not just the Tinderbox, which on an individual basis I would give a three star rating.

Penguin Little Black Classic- 23

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The Little Black Classic Collection by penguin looks like it contains lots of hidden gems. I couldn鈥檛 help it; they looked so good that I went and bought them all. I shall post a short review after reading each one. No doubt it will take me several months to get through all of them! Hopefully I will find some classic authors, from across the ages, that I may not have come across had I not bought this collection.
Profile Image for Ken.
2,471 reviews1,368 followers
April 15, 2020
This edition comprised of nine short fairy tales, with The Tinder-Box and Thumbelina being the strongest in this collection.

I'd brought this as a keepsake whilst visiting the Hans Christian Andersen Fairy tale House attraction I Copenhagen a few years ago and thought it would be ideal to read a couple a night to my daughter.

Most were pretty short but ultimately forgettable, I can't recall the selection of books they had available but would have preferred to have read all he's better known tales instead.
Profile Image for cypt.
655 reviews768 followers
July 6, 2022
Nuostabaus gro啪io Vladyslavo Jerko iliustracijos... Norisi 啪i奴r臈t ir 啪i奴r臈t!!!

Pasaka tai apie tai, kaip mafija (Matijo拧aitis??) valdo :D Kareivis i拧girdo i拧 senut臈s, kad yra stebuklingas r奴sys su 3 拧unim ir belekiek pinig懦, ir jis gali visus pinigus pasiimt, jei tik atne拧 jai skiltuv膮. Jis prisirinko pinig懦, skiltuv膮, nukirto senutei galv膮, su skiltuvo pagalba pralobo (gal臈davo i拧sikviesti 3 拧unis, kurie pild臈 jo norus). Su啪inojo, kad yra gra啪i karalait臈, bet t臈vai j膮 labai saugo, tai pirma su 拧un懦 pagalba kelis kartus j膮 miegan膷i膮 pagrob臈 ir "pabu膷iavo", tada v臈l su 拧un懦 pagalba atsikrat臈 jos t臈v懦, tada miestie膷iai sako: b奴k m奴s懦 meras, vesk karalait臋! Ir visi laimingai gyveno. Blemba, kaip bijau savivaldybi懦 rinkim懦 2023 m.

U啪 iliustracijas +100 啪vaig啪du膷i懦, u啪 pasak膮 -95 啪vaig啪dut臈s, u啪 tai, kad ant vir拧elio klaidinga iliustracija - ne grobiki拧ko kareivio, o prie拧 savo vali膮 transportuojamos princes臈s -1 啪vaig啪dut臈.
Profile Image for Carolyn Marie.
364 reviews9,090 followers
December 28, 2020
A wonderful collection of stories by one of the greatest fairytale/fable writer's of all time!
I grew up with a few of these stories, but it was such a joy to read some new ones!
My personal favorite from this collection, and a longtime favorite of mine is The Steadfast Tin Soldier!
I am hoping to get my hands on a full collection of his stories soon! I look forward to reading many more!
Couldn't recommend these classic stories more! They are a staple in any book nerds library!
Profile Image for Bionic Jean.
1,382 reviews1,484 followers
May 12, 2017
The Tinderbox is one of the first fairy tales written by the Danish author Hans Christian Andersen, and remains one of his most popular, possibly because it has echoes of several earlier stories, and conforms to many of the features we expect from fairy tales. It was originally published in 1835, as one of four fairy stories, along with "Little Claus and Big Claus", "The Princess and the Pea", and "Little Ida's Flowers". Except for "Little Ida's Flowers", these early tales were not Hans Christian Andersen's own original ideas. Earlier in the year, he had written a letter stating,

"I have started some 'Fairy Tales Told for Children' and believe I have succeeded. I have told a couple of tales which as a child I was happy about, and which I do not believe are known, and have written them exactly the way I would tell them to a child."

In a later edition, Andersen confirmed his commitment to this "improved" style of writing to his public,

"The style should be such that one hears the narrator. Therefore, the language had to be similar to the spoken word; the stories are for children, but adults too should be able to listen in. The first three fairy tales are ones I heard during childhood, in the spinning room and during the harvesting of the hops."

At the end of this review I will name the Scandinavian folk tale Andersen is referring to. This story, The Tinderbox, may call to mind other fairy stories too, but before going any further, here is a summary of the story.

A poor soldier is returning home from war. He meets a witch, who asks him, "How would you like to be rich?" Of course, the soldier says that he would like this very much. The witch show him a hollow tree, asking him to climb to the top with a rope around his waist. Then, she says, she can lower him down into the hollow space, to retrieve a magic tinderbox for her. She promises the soldier that inside the tree he will find wide passages lit by a hundred lamps. There will be three filled to the brim with with precious coins. The witch assures the soldier that he may keep as much of this treasure as he likes - plus anything else he finds inside the chambers - as long as her gives her the tinderbox. The soldier can't wait to get going.

The witch also warns him, however, that

When The Tinderbox was first published, it was not favourably received by the Danish critics. They disliked the informal, chatty style of Hans Christian Andersen's work. I disagree with those critics, as I personally think his style is part of his charm. But they disliked his lack of morals too, and in this I can concur, especially with stories like this one. It may have many features of a fairy story, but is certainly not a moral tale or a parable, with such a greedy, selfish, brutish "hero". It is, however, very reminiscent of "The Arabian Nights" with its emphasis on haphazard killings, unpredictable and random events, features such as all the princesses being beautiful by definition, the magic of threes, the supernatural, "deus ex machina" endings and so on.

Hans Christian Andersen was familiar with folk and fairy lore, and widely read. He will have known the tales in "The Arabian Nights". The Tinderbox is specifically quite similar to

Perhaps it is in this that our love of this tale lies; our satisfaction that this is a "true fairytale" meeting our expectations, and faintly echoing other well-loved tales we have known since our childhood, and our parents' childhoods, and so on through time immemorial. For I can think of no other reason really why this story should be so perennially popular.
Profile Image for The Artisan Geek.
445 reviews7,326 followers
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April 22, 2020


21/3/20
These stories were really good! They reminded me of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland - just as absurd hahah! :D

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Profile Image for Darwin8u.
1,775 reviews8,949 followers
June 18, 2018
"I won tears from your eyes the first time I sang. I will never forget that about you."
- Hans Christian Andersen, "The Nightingale"

description

Vol 23 of my Penguin . This represents a collection of Hans Christian Anderson's classic fairy tales, translated by Tiina Nunnally. This collection is short but diverse. Some of the stories I was very familiar with and others I read here for the first time. Here is the list of tales included in this volume, along with a rough star-ranking:

1. The Tinderbox - 鉁湱鉁�
2. Little Claus and Big Claus - 鉁湱鉁湱
3. The Princess and the Pea - 鉁湱鉁�
4. The Steadfast Tin Soldier - 鉁湱
5. The Nightingale - 鉁湱鉁湱
6. The Red Shoes - 鉁湱
Profile Image for Cheryl.
401 reviews
December 18, 2016
Well, well, well. I did not like this story.

The writing and art was fine but the story itself was terrible. For a children's book, this is an outrage. This teaches kids (and grown ups, for that matter) absolutely nothing!

Murder, greed, kidnapping, more murder - only for the main character to be rewarded in the end by marrying the princess!

If this was an actual novel intended for an older audience, I may have liked this story... in a grungy kind of way. As a kid's story? No way!
Profile Image for Michelle Curie.
1,023 reviews450 followers
July 10, 2017
Bloody hell, Andersen, are you okay? And what is wrong with me for being able to forget for even a second how many lives are lost in these tales, how many tears wept and how many body parts lost? This Little Black Classic provides us with six of Hans Christian Andersen's dark fairy tales, making up one of in my opinion most beautiful collection of this series (out of those I have read so far).



I knew most of the tales before, like The Steadfast Tin Soldier (my favourite in this book), The Princess and the Pea and The Nightingale, but I thoroughly enjoyed another encounter with them. Andersen stories are strange above anything else, but so many other things as well: Creepy and painful, eery and beautiful. I love them, and this book made me want to read more of them again, too.



I think this book provides a fine selection of the Danish author's work, and definitely gives a good idea of what his writing is like. I get that some people don't find them suitable for children; the characters are greedy and selfish, make bad decisions and act violently, yet I personally enjoyed their enchanting morbidity very much.

In 2015 Penguin introduced the Little Black Classics series to celebrate Penguin's 80th birthday. Including little stories from "around the world and across many centuries" as the publisher describes, I have been intrigued to read those for a long time, before finally having started. I hope to sooner or later read and review all of them!
Profile Image for Chantal.
1,196 reviews174 followers
July 21, 2019
Cute little story out of the old box of Hans Christian Anderson. This story teaches a lot of things in life. Greed, murder, marriage everything comes by in this story. I do however find the story more for children, then for grownups. It also misses something and I can't put my finger on it. It is weird how a murderer can be a king in another day. Life is weird LOL

Profile Image for Chelsey with a y.
368 reviews113 followers
March 11, 2018
This was interesting. It鈥檚 funny how when he ran out of money his friends didn鈥檛 see to care about him much
Profile Image for M.M. Strawberry Library & Reviews.
4,442 reviews380 followers
February 19, 2024
(Included in the Yellow Fairy Book)

The story got weird at times, but it was overall pretty enjoyable. Although I'm glad for a poor person gaining a fortune for themselves, I do think the soldier was a jackass to the witch. She only wanted her tinder-box, he already had plenty of gold for himself, which he would not have without her, and he kills the poor bitch dead before going on his merry way with her tinder-box.

So not really a hero that you could root for, but the rest of the story was entertaining, I remember this from my childhood as a favorite and came across it again in Andrew Lang's Yellow Fairy Book.
Profile Image for Sara.
1,714 reviews516 followers
February 4, 2025
丌賯丕 丕蹖賳 趩胤賵乇 賲蹖鈥屫堎嗀池� 丕蹖賳鈥屬囐呝� 毓賴丿 卮讴賳 賵 賳丕賲乇丿 亘丕卮賴責!

賴賲禺賵丕賳蹖 亘賴賲賳 郾鄞郯鄢
Profile Image for Bettie.
9,981 reviews6 followers
September 10, 2016



What are you going to use that tinder box for?鈥� the soldier asked.

鈥楴one of your business!鈥� the witch said, 鈥榶ou鈥檝e got all your money! Just give me the tinderbox'

Stuff and nonsense!鈥� the soldier said, 鈥榯ell me at once what you鈥檙e going to use it for, or I鈥檒l
draw my sword and cut off your head!鈥�

鈥楴o!鈥� the witch said.

Then the soldier cut off her head. There she lay!
Profile Image for Peter.
777 reviews134 followers
February 3, 2016
After the horrible Hebel and his terrible tales of turgidity here is Andersen the weaver of words, the fairy tale fabulist to show him how it's done.
Andersen's masterful storytelling is sublime. If his stories fail to touch you then you are to old and cynical.
Profile Image for Nivedita.
161 reviews67 followers
March 13, 2016
This was a good collection of short stories. Extremely entertaining fairy tales. Hans Christian Andersen is the master of fairy tales, and he proved it with this one!
Profile Image for ~Madison.
510 reviews37 followers
September 19, 2021
super fun but morbid at times but that鈥檚 what old fairytales were about so I鈥檓 not mad about it
Profile Image for  pagesandteastains.
174 reviews26 followers
May 31, 2018
I've always been a fan of Hans Christian Andersen growing up - my favorites being The Little Mermaid, The Snow Queen and yes, even the Tinderbox.

But honestly, the rest of the stories given here just didn't sit well with me. I liked The Steadfast Tin Soldier, it sort of reminded me of The Nutcracker for a bit but nonetheless I think I liked the melancholy of it. The rest were just violent and seemingly without any reason or lesson? I don't know. Maybe if I had read them as a younger reader I would've liked them. Who knows.

One can say these stories are too violent for children - but then again I think all his stories are violent and extreme. One thing I noticed while re-reading The Tinderbox is how the soldier - the main character - just gets away with everything? He cuts off the witch's head in the beginning without any reason apart from the fact that she didn't tell him why she wants the tinderbox. She just got you a ton gold coin, man. Sheesh. Talk about anger issues.

And then later on, the soldier's friends stopped talking to him when he ran out of money and then making up when he got rich again. And at the end, the princess seemed way too chill about her parents being flung up in the air and dying when striking the ground, just because she could be queen and do whatever she wants now. LOL. What does this instill in a child?

The version I read of The Tinderbox was from by James Riordan and that one wasn't this harsh for some reason? It was better written. For example, the part where the soldier's friends refuse to come visit him in that book was that they gave the excuse that his new (poorer) apartments had too many stairs. While still petty, it shows some semblance of humanity or logic. It was just a much better retelling, I would definitely recommend you check out Riordan's version of it.
Profile Image for Regitze Xenia.
942 reviews105 followers
February 21, 2019
I admit it, I might be biased. As a Dane, I have grown up with Hans Christian Andersen's fairytales. Where many cite Harry Potter as sparking their love of stories and reading, HCA was that for me. This book contains some of my absolute favourites of his stories (he has written 157 or something in total, I believe), reading them in English was certainly a different experience and sometimes I couldn't help but recall the Danish phrasing without thinking. I will always adore these stories. Childhood magic that's more than readable as an adult as well.
Profile Image for Vienna.
331 reviews62 followers
September 15, 2018
There are six fairy tales in this collection: The Tinderbox, Little Claus and Big Claus, The Princess on the Pea, The Steadfast Tin Soldier, The Nightingale and The Red Shoes. Out of those fairy tales I liked The Tinderbox and The Steadfast Tin Soldier the most. I just wished they would have included his most famous fairy tale: The Little Mermaid. However, this is a great collection if you don't know where to start with his work and are not sure yet if you want to read all his fairy tales.
Profile Image for Lea.
1,068 reviews285 followers
June 13, 2017
Hans Christian Anderson once again proving that fairy tales most certainly are NOT very children-friendly. They are really eery and almost all were great.
Profile Image for Mike.
429 reviews45 followers
November 24, 2020
Lighthearted violence and a sort of nostalgia for what鈥檚 never existed. Impressive stuff.
Profile Image for t.
366 reviews4 followers
August 12, 2022
why would people read these to kids
Profile Image for Abigail.
7,692 reviews243 followers
February 11, 2019
The Tinderbox, illustrated by Vladyslav Yerko

Vladyslav Yerko, the fabulously talented Ukrainian artist and illustrator, whose edition of ranks as one of my absolute favorite fairy-tale retellings, returns to the work of Hans Christian Andersen in this marvelous picture-book. Here we have the classic story of a poor soldier, returning home from the wars, who encounters an old witch on his journey and finds his fortunes changed. Agreeing to fetch the eponymous tinderbox for the witch, in return for all the money he can carry away from its underground hiding place, he ends up murdering the witch when she won't tell him how the tinderbox will be used, and keeping both it and the money. Becoming a gentleman of leisure with his newfound wealth, the soldier's fortune holds, until the money runs out. It is then that he discover that the tinderbox controls and summons the three magical guard dogs who watched over the witch's underground treasure - the chest with bronze coins, the one with silver, and the one with gold. Fortune restored, the soldier next uses his magical dogs to kidnap the kingdom's beautiful princess from her bed, so he might look on her in her sleep. When this results in his imprisonment and imminent execution, he uses his dogs to destroy the king and queen and their advisors, marrying the princess and becoming king himself...

I was struck during the course of reading The Tinderbox, as I always am with this story, by how amoral of a tale it is. It doesn't have, like Andersen's , with its narrative of a girl who is punished for her ingratitude and impiety with a terrible bodily disfigurement and violation, a moral outlike with which I would disagree. Rather, it seems entirely lacking in a moral outlook altogether, and the narrative never seems to question the ethics of the soldier's actions, in violating his agreement with the witch, going back on his word to turn over the tinderbox to her, and eventually murdering her. Nor are his actions, in kidnapping the princess, just so he can look at her sleeping form, ever depicted as problematic. Instead, the reader is apparently meant to sympathize with his change of fortune and to applaud his use of the dogs, whilst ignoring the fact tht he is a word-breaker, a murderer, and a pervet of sorts. I've always found this rather odd, and have never been convinced, despite his one good quality, of giving generously to the poor, that the soldier is a hero worth cheering for.

All that said, this presentation of The Tinderbox is, despite my usual distaste at the tale, so phenomenally gorgeous, that I am rating the book at five stars. Vladyslav Yerko's painting are so beautiful, so marvelously detailed and engrossing, that it was a sheer pleasure to peruse them! From decorative endpaper to decorative endpaper, front to back, this is a visually stunning book. No superlative could do it justice! The detailed indoor scenes, as when the soldier fetches the treasure from its underground lair, or when he first encounters one of the dogs in his room at the inn, have a rich, golden glow, and are crammed with so many little objects of interest, that one could pore over the page endlessly:

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The outdoor scenes are lighter in tone, but no less rich in detail. The scene showing the city center is particularly lovely:

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I have no idea, of course, how Vladyslav Yerko views this story - presumably he enjoys it, or he would not bother illustrating it! - but the scene in which the dog servant flies through the air with the princess on his back, resonates with my feeling that the soldier is a bit of a villain. Here's the princess, still enough of a little girl to be hugging her stuffed rabbit in her sleep, being ogled by a stranger, and a grown man at that!:

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However that may be, there is no question that this is one of the most beautiful fairy-tale picture-books I have encountered. A lovely, lovely volume, one I would recommend wholeheartedly to anyone who loves fairy-tales, or who appreciates gorgeously-illustrated books.
Profile Image for Anna K募avi艈a.
808 reviews205 followers
December 15, 2015
Magic tinderbox and three dogs, an amoral soldier and a princess under house arrest.

Beautiful and colourful illustrations by an Ukrainian artist


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In the morning he could see through the iron grating of the little window how the people were hastening out of the town to see him hanged; he heard the drums beating, and saw the soldiers marching. Every one ran out to look at them. and a shoemaker鈥檚 boy, with a leather apron and slippers on, galloped by so fast, that one of his slippers flew off and struck against the wall where the soldier sat looking through the iron grating.
Profile Image for [ J o ].
1,962 reviews530 followers
February 4, 2017
Hans Christian Andersen was a 19th Century Danish writer best know for fairy tales and short fables, though he was a prolific writer of plays, novels and poetry.

This is a selection of the lesser-known fairy tales written by Andersen. I've not read any of his other works though I'm well versed in the outside knowledge and I have to say I was disappointed in how terribly they were written and how blas茅 they seemed as a whole. Although I'm sure some of their charm must have been lost in translation, I still can't say I enjoyed any of them.


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Profile Image for Jenna.
Author听11 books365 followers
August 4, 2024
Andersen's tales are hard to read, they are so deeply shaded by despair and cynicism: a man murders one woman and violates another woman while she is sleeping (he "couldn't resist...because he was a real soldier") but escapes any punishment; another tale's hero is pushed to his demise in a fire for no reason by a wantonly destructive child; horses and grandmothers are walloped to death as thoughtlessly as if they were flies; being a princess is nothing more meaningful than living such a pampered life that one's skin is sensitive to peas placed under mattresses. Glib trickery and amoral cleverness are rewarded, and the hand of heaven is breathtakingly harsh and cruel if it is present at all. Only in "The Nightingale," an allegory about an artist who forgives an unappreciative patron (an allegory that can be read as uncannily prescient about our current era's struggles with AI!), is there a believable glimpse of true mercy and the possibility of redemption.
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