Talk:Book:The Wee Free Men: Difference between revisions

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(New page: {{Book Data |title= The Wee Free Men |photo= |date= |publisher= |isbn= |pages= |series= Tiffany Aching |characters= the nac mac Feegle |annotations= cross-reference to semi-auto...)
 
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{{Book Data
|title= The Wee Free Men
|photo=
|date=
|publisher=
|isbn=
|pages=


|series=    Tiffany Aching
I know the content pages aren't the place for literary criticism or speculation, so I'll put this note here to see who bites.
|characters= the nac mac Feegle
 
|annotations= cross-reference to semi-autobiographical short stories by Scottish author George MacDonald-Fraser
There's a link, on the Reading Suggestions page, to Irish childrens' author Pat O'Shea.  Re-reading the early chapters of {{WFM}}, it has just struck me how the scene  between Tiffany and Miss Tick, when they meet for the first time, is in all aspects pure pastiche of O'Shea. The setting reflects one of the bizarre, slightly dream-like, "country fairs" of her Irish faeryscape - right down to the in-line text drawings.  There is O'Shea's obligatory talking animal - not Cù Rùa the wise fox, but the "yellow, sick, toad" There is the superficially whimsical dialogue between Tiffany and Miss Tick, but which hides deeper realities.
|notes=
 
}}
Check out '''''The Hounds of the Morrigan''''', particularly the Swapping Fair scenes, to see what I maen here...--[[User:AgProv|AgProv]] 13:26, 23 July 2008 (UTC)

Revision as of 13:26, 23 July 2008

I know the content pages aren't the place for literary criticism or speculation, so I'll put this note here to see who bites.

There's a link, on the Reading Suggestions page, to Irish childrens' author Pat O'Shea. Re-reading the early chapters of The Wee Free Men, it has just struck me how the scene between Tiffany and Miss Tick, when they meet for the first time, is in all aspects pure pastiche of O'Shea. The setting reflects one of the bizarre, slightly dream-like, "country fairs" of her Irish faeryscape - right down to the in-line text drawings. There is O'Shea's obligatory talking animal - not Cù Rùa the wise fox, but the "yellow, sick, toad" There is the superficially whimsical dialogue between Tiffany and Miss Tick, but which hides deeper realities.

Check out The Hounds of the Morrigan, particularly the Swapping Fair scenes, to see what I maen here...--AgProv 13:26, 23 July 2008 (UTC)