
| Hardcover (2002-05-06) | Price: Rs. 3177 | Imported Edition. Order now and get it in 14-21 business days. |
With numerous examples that represent this fascinating form of folk literature Marjorie Dundas fits her selections into twelve categories of riddles and other enigmatic statements. A final section of "stories that break the mold a little" gives the reader a chance to check out all the categories and perhaps go beyond them.
The book opens with "Clever Manka, " a tale in which a social inferior outwits a supposed superior. In another type of story, a scholar debates in sign language to show his superiority to his colleagues, only to be bested by a passionate young peasant. In Hawaii, riddles take on an extra dimension as the king greedily makes young men bring him new riddles, only to defeat them and bring them to a horrible death when they cannot find the answer to his own insoluble riddle.
In these tales occasionally a character seems able to answer any riddle and, in the process, makes his answer more clever than the riddle itself. From Africa and India come dilemma tales which, although riddle-like, have no specifically correct answers.
Among the many riddling tales included are "The Cunning Gypsy, " "The Devil and His Grandmother, " "King John and the Abbot of Canterbury, " and "Crocodile's Relatives."
| patrick johan kugelberg michael e mortenson henry f korth r jayaswal | general wesley k clark lazarus miti madhavikutty richard panchyk fawcett s e |