Folktales from africa: the baboons who went this way and that
โ Scribed by Smith, Alexander Mccall
- Book ID
- 100662726
- Publisher
- Canongate Books
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 1 MB
- Category
- Fiction
- City
- New York, Edinburgh
- ISBN
- 1847676952
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
A man with a tree growing out of his head? A woman with children made of wax? A bird that can be milked? With more stories from his original celebration of African folktales, "The girl who married a lion", let Alexander McCall Smith once again take you to a land where the bizarre is everyday and magic is real.
โฆ Subjects
FICTION -- General
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
SUMMARY: TALES THAT SPEAK FROM THE AFRICAN HEARTA man with a tree growing out of his head? A woman with children made of wax? A bird that can be milked?Let Alexander McCall Smith once again take you to a land where the bizarre is everyday and magic is real, with more illustrated stories from The Gir
### Review "'A collection of charm and tenderness' DAILY TELEGRAPH 'Deceptively elegant... these brilliant stories shine through in a way that is wholesome, engaging and highly rewarding' HERALD 'These stories are still beautiful; creating a wryly humorous place where the animal and human worlds ar
SUMMARY: TALES THAT SPEAK FROM THE AFRICAN HEARTA man with a tree growing out of his head? A woman with children made of wax? A bird that can be milked?Let Alexander McCall Smith once again take you to a land where the bizarre is everyday and magic is real, with more illustrated stories from The Gir
SUMMARY: TALES THAT SPEAK FROM THE AFRICAN HEARTA man with a tree growing out of his head? A woman with children made of wax? A bird that can be milked?Let Alexander McCall Smith once again take you to a land where the bizarre is everyday and magic is real, with more illustrated stories from The Gir
### Review "'A collection of charm and tenderness' DAILY TELEGRAPH 'Deceptively elegant... these brilliant stories shine through in a way that is wholesome, engaging and highly rewarding' HERALD 'These stories are still beautiful; creating a wryly humorous place where the animal and human worlds ar