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Western Isles Folk Tales is a representative collection of stories from the geographical span of the long chain of islands known as the Outer Hebrides. Some are well-known tales and others have been sought out by the author, but all are retold in the natural voice of a local man. You will find premonitions, accounts of uncanny events and mythical beings, such as the blue men of the stream who test mariners venturing into the tidal currents around the Shiant Islands. Also included are tales from islands now uninhabited, like the archipelago of St Kilda, in contrast to the witty yarns from bustling harbours.The author was the inaugural winner of the Robert Louis Stevenson Fellowship (1995) and his Acts of Trust collaboration with visual artist Christine Morrison won the multi-arts category in the first British Awards for Storytelling Excellence (2012). Both author and illustrator live in Stornoway, Isle of Lewis.
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16 released booksFolk Tales is a 16-book series with 16 released primary works first released in 2001 with contributions by Henriette Barkow, Bob Pegg, and Johnny Gillet.
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“Where the Northern Ocean, in vast whirls, Boils round the naked, melancholy isles Of farthest Thule; and the Atlantic surge Pours in among the stormy Hebrides.” Charlotte Bronté
There are so many secrets hidden in the Western Isles where the landscape, the legends and the tales become one with the soul of the islanders. Wise women warn sailors against their curiosity, skulls react against annoying mortals, dead mothers protect the women who have decided to raise their children as their own. A crop-headed freckled lass is not hindered by the unimportant obstacles posed by arrogant (and ignorant...) men and strange old women are defeated by the courage of a black dog.
Lovers elope and brave the stormy seas and those who wish to harm them. A young woman gives herself to the treacherous waters to reunite with her beloved. Wives hear the voices of their lost husbands narrating their tragic fate. A blind woman finds her sight when she sees the soulless body of her sailor son. Blue men, whose origins have been lost to the mists of time, rise from the sea to ask riddles to perplexed sailors. Bogeymen, spirits, witches are here but the finest stories are always the ones about ordinary people braving the elements and themselves.
Ian Stephen narrates tales from the six main islands of the Outer Hebrides - Harris, Lewis, South and North Uist, Barra and Benbecula - providing valuable information on the sources and versions of each story. His writing echoes the mystery and mysticism of the Western Isles, creating one of the most memorable stops in the exciting journey to the heart of British and Irish folklore.
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