Hans Christian Andersen’s Stories and Tales
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6C Hans Christian Andersen. Illustrated by M. L. Stone and V. Pedersen. Boston: Houghton, Osgood and Co., 1879.
Notes
This expansive anthology features dozens of Andersen’s most defining masterpieces, including iconic narratives such as "The Princess and the Pea," "The Little Match Girl," and "The Rose Elf". Far from the completely sanitized and flattened adaptations of modern pop culture, these nineteenth-century translations preserve the haunting, melancholic beauty and stark existential realities inherent in the original Danish prose. Andersen seamlessly blended vibrant elements of local folklore with poignant Christian allegories, using talking objects and deeply sensitive, marginalized protagonists to construct a complex emotional mirror. The resulting plots systematically challenge the rigid class structures of the era, exploring profound themes of spiritual resilience, unrequited devotion, and the pursuit of inner dignity amidst a cruel and indifferent material world.
Hans Christian Andersen (1805–1875), drew heavily upon the acute poverty and psychological isolation of his early childhood to forge the raw emotional vulnerability of his tales. Born the son of an impoverished shoemaker and a washerwoman in Odense, Denmark, Andersen moved to Copenhagen as a young teenager with desperate dreams of becoming an actor or opera singer. Facing severe class discrimination and structural rejection due to his awkward appearance and lack of education, he eventually pivoted to literature, where his unique poetic voice was championed by wealthy patrons. While he initially achieved international fame for his adult travel diaries and avant-garde novels, it was his self-published, small fairy tale booklets—commencing in 1835—that permanently solidified his global legacy. Across his celebrated life, Andersen systematically inverted the traditional mechanics of oral folklore; instead of cataloging ancient regional fables like the Brothers Grimm, he invented entirely original, highly literary mythologies that captured the tragic contradictions of his own personal climb through European high society
Description
Green cloth binding with black lettering to upper board. Gilt titles to spine and illustration blocked in to upper board and spine. Brown endpapers. Some edge wear discoloration and fading to head and foot of spine. Clear plastic protective cover.
Hans Christian Andersen’s Stories and Tales





