List Written by Aesop - Audio book performed by Mary Woods - Unabridged Fiction - 3 CASSETTES - 4 hours Publisher, Blackstone Audiobooks (February 2002) AESOP'S FABLES are short, satirical tales written in the 6th Century B.C. in which the animal characters talk and act like human beings. They are very brief and are designed to teach simple but important lessons. Aesop was a Greek slave. Little is known of him but his authenticity is verified by Herodotus. After winning his freedom, he became something of an ambassador for the king, and these celebrated fables are said to have had a calming effect on the king’s distressed people. "No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted." —The Lion and the Mouse It is both amazing and wonderful that so much of the richness of our language and our moral education still owes a huge debt to a Greek slave who was executed over two thousand years ago. Yet "sour grapes," "crying wolf," "a dog in a manger," "actions speak louder than words," "honesty is the best policy," and literally hundreds of other metaphors, axioms and ideas that are now woven into the very fabric of Western culture all came from Aesop's Fables. The earliest extant collections of Aesop's stories were made by various Greek versifiers and Latin translators, to whose compilations were added tales from Oriental and ancient sources to form what we now know as Aesop's Fables. The majority of European fables, including those of La Fontaine, are largely derived from these succinct tales. An extraordinary storyteller who used cunning foxes, surly dogs, clever mice, fearsome lions, and foolish humans to describe the reality of a harsh world, Aesop created narratives that are appealing, funny, politically astute, and profoundly true. And Aesop's truth—often summed up in the pithy "moral of the story"—retains an awesome power to affect us, reaching us through both our intellects and our hearts. |
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