Audiolibro: Just So Stories (version 4)
- Download HOW THE WHALE GOT HIS THROAT audio
- Download HOW THE CAMEL GOT HIS HUMP audio
- Download HOW THE RHINOCEROS GOT HIS SKIN audio
- Download HOW THE LEOPARD GOT HIS SPOTS audio
- Download THE ELEPHANT'S CHILD audio
- Download THE SING-SONG OF OLD MAN KANGAROO audio
- Download THE BEGINNING OF THE ARMADILLOS audio
- Download HOW THE FIRST LETTER WAS WRITTEN audio
- Download HOW THE ALPHABET WAS MADE audio
- Download THE CRAB THAT PLAYED WITH THE SEA audio
- Download THE CAT THAT WALKED BY HIMSELF audio
- Download THE TABU TALE audio
- Download THE BUTTERFLY THAT STAMPED audio
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Descripción
The Just So Stories for Little Children are among Kipling's best known and loved works. This recording aims to be the first complete audio book of this title with nothing left out.
The Nobel prize-winning author's enjoyment in playing with the sounds and meanings of words is very evident throughout, and adds to adults' enjoyment of these stories for children. This playfulness is also dramatically present in the plotting. For both reasons these stories been loved by generations of children and adults alike. Because the writing plays with sound and meaning the Just So Stories are best enjoyed when read aloud.
As we all are, Kipling was a child of his time and social setting, so for example in "How the Leopard Got his Spots" he uses what one recent reviewer called "the N word" to refer to the Ethiopian. Each listener will need to examine critically both Kipling's attitudes and their own.
This recording of the Just So Stories by Rudyard Kipling includes Kipling's descriptions of the pictures he drew for the book. These pictures can be found in a PDF file to accompany each chapter. As well as the twelve stories most often published under this title (from the first British edition) it also includes "The Tabu Tale" a thirteenth story (included in the first US edition). The last story Kipling wrote "Ham and the Porcupine" is also a just so story, but has not usually been collected with the others, and perhaps lacks their verve and wordplay. The Kipling Society publishes an excellent freely available online edition with a good set of notes on the text.
The stories are fanciful, and not intended to offer historical, scientific or religious accounts of the way things became. They are simply and exquisitely stories to enjoy.
So please enjoy them in this reading. (Introduction by Tim Bulkeley)
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