
Fairy tales may be eternal, but like all stories born of the oral tradition, they are also forever evolving. Below a selection of some of the best, for readers of all ages.
Classics â¦
âThe Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm,â edited by Noel Daniel. Taschen. One of my favorite compilations, this collection has vintage illustrations that highlight how these stories have changed as theyâve been told and retold through the ages.
âThe Annotated Brothers Grimm,â by Maria Tatar. W.W. Norton. Tatar, a professor of Germanic languages and literatures at Harvard, is an expert on folklore and mythology. Her annotations are unparalleled.
âThe Annotated Fairy Tale,â by Maria Tatar. W.W. Norton. This edition includes plenty of Grimm, but also favorites by Charles Perrault and Hans Christian Anderson. The stories are meant to be read aloud while children look over your shoulder at the sumptuous illustrations.
âFairy Tales from the Brothers Grimm: A New English Version,â by Philip Pullman. Penguin. These sophisticated retellings by the author of âThe Golden Compassâ cover 50 tales, including a fascinating number of lesser-known stories.
âEncyclopedia Mythologica: Fairies and Magical Creaturesâ and âEncyclopedia Mythologica: Dragons & Monsters,â by Matthew Reinhart and Robert Saguda. Candlewick. Younger readers will appreciate these guides by two masters of pop-up artistry.
⦠And Their Descendants
âHansel and Gretelâ by Neil Gaiman. Illustrated by Lorenzo Mattotti. In this recent interpretation, Gaiman plays up the taleâs inherent horror, well-matched in its nightmarishness by Mattottiâs stark black-and-white ink illustrations.
âThe Neverending Story,â by Michael Ende. Puffin Books. First published in Germany in 1979, this middle-grade novel became an international sensation. The titular book-within-a-book welcomes readers into the endangered world of Fantastica, where the protagonist, Bastian, becomes a character. Guess who has to save it?
âThe Princess Bride,â by William Goldman. Harcourt. Youâve already seen and loved the movie. The book is just as good. Even without Mandy Patinkin.
âRump,â âRed,â âJack,â âGrump,â by Liesl Shurtliff. Knopf Books for Young Readers. Funny, fractured fairy tales for children, 8 to 12.
âA Tale Dark & Grimm,â âIn a Glass Grimmlyâ and âThe Grimm Conclusion,â by Adam Gidwitz. Puffin Books. A former Brooklyn teacher, Gidwitz gets his child-friendly mix of blood, gore and black humor precisely right.
âTales of Terror,â by Edgar Allan Poe. Narrated by David Throne and Bruce Blau. Blackstone Audio. Kids may doze through the long introductory passage of âMurders in the Rue Morgue,â but âThe Tell-Tale Heartâ and âThe Facts in the Case of Monsieur Valdemarâ will have them on the edge of their car seats from the start.