What the Moon Saw and Other Stories, illustrated by Alfred W. Little Rudy and Other Stories, Miller, 1864. The Sand-Hills of Jutland and Other Stories, Ticknor & Fields (New York, NY), 1860. Newill, Napier, 1864, also published as The Emperor and the Nightingale, illustrated by Bill Sokol, Pantheon, 1959. Little Ellie and Other Tales, Francis, 1856. The Story Teller and Other Fairy Tales, Francis, 1850. The Dream of Little Tuk and Other Tales, illustrated by Count Pocci, Grant & Griffith, 1848. Shoes of Fortune and Other Tales, illustrated by Otto Speckter and others, Chapman & Hall, 1847, Wiley (New York, NY), 1848. SINGLE TALES PUBLISHED SEPARATELY OR AS TITLE STORIES OF COLLECTIONS The Complete Fairy Tales and Stories, translated by Erik Christian Haugaard, foreword by Virginia Haviland, Doubleday (New York, NY), 1974.Įlf Hill: Tales from Hans Christian Andersen, edited by Naomi Lewis, illustrated by Emma Chichester Clark, Star Bright Books, 1999. Seven Tales, translated by Eva Le Gallienne, illustrated by Maurice Sendak, Harper (New York, NY), 1959.įavorite Fairy Tales, illustrated by Paul Durand, Golden Press (New York, NY), 1974. The Complete Andersen, six volumes (includes all 168 tales), translated and edited by Jean Hersholt, illustrated by Fritz Kredel, Heritage Press, 1952. Whistler, Oxford University Press (New York, NY), 1936, new edition, Dufour (Chester Springs, PA), 1959.Īndersen's Fairy Tales, translated by Jean Hersholt, illustrated by Fritz Kredel, Heritage Press, 1942. Rhead, Harper (New York, NY), 1914.įorty Stories, illustrated by Christine Jackson, Faber, 1930, new edition published as Forty-two Stories, illustrated by Robin Jacques, 1953.įour Tales from Hans Andersen, illustrated by Gwendolyn Raverat, Cambridge University Press (New York, NY), 1935.įairy Tales and Legends, illustrated by Rex J. Stories from Hans Andersen, illustrated by Edmund Dulac, Hodder & Stoughton, 1912.įairy Tales and Wonder Stories, illustrated by Louis J. Sambourne, Macmillan ( New York, NY), 1910. Three Tales of Hans Andersen, illustrated by Edward L. Twenty Best Fairy Tales by Hans Andersen, illustrated by Lucy Fitch Perkins, Stokes, 1907.įairy Tales from Hans Andersen, illustrated by Maxwell Armfield, Dutton ( New York, NY), 1910. Robinson, Dent, 1899.įairy Tales of Hans Andersen, illustrated by Helen Stratton, Newnes, 1899. Robinson, Bliss, Sands, 1897.įairy Tales from Hans Christian Andersen, illustrated by Thomas H. Weguelin, Lawrence & Bullen, 1893.ĭanish Fairy Tales and Legends, illustrated by William H. Hans Andersen's Fairy Tales, illustrated by John R. Stories and Fairy Tales, illustrated by Arthur J. (pseudonym of Eleanor Vere Boyle), Sampson, Low, 1882. Pedersen, Hurd & Houghton, 1871.įairy Tales, illustrated by E. Stone, and with the original illustrations by T. Wonder Stories Told for Children, illustrated by M. Bayes, Routledge, 1864.įairy Tales and Stories, illustrated by A. Wonderful Stories for Children, translated by Mary Howitt, Chapman & Hall, 1st series, 1835-37, 2nd series, 1838, 3rd series, 1845.ĭanish Fairy Legends and Tales, translated by Caroline Peachey, Pickering, 1846, 2nd edition, Addey, 1852, 3rd edition, Bohn, 1861.Ī Danish Story-Book, translated by Charles Boner, illustrated by Count Pocci, Cundall, 1846.Ī Poet's Day Dreams, translated by Anne S. COLLECTED FAIRY TALE EDITIONS IN ENGLISH TRANSLATION Pedersen, Reitzel (Copenhagen, Denmark), 1862-63, and in Nye eventyr og historien (title means "New Tales and Stories"), illustrated by Lorenz Froelich, Reitzel (Copenhagen, Denmark), 1870-74. The complete collection of 168 tales is contained in Eventyr og historien (title means "Tales and Stories"), illustrated by T. The first illustrated edition was done by Thomas Vilhelm Pedersen in 1850. Writings COLLECTED FAIRY TALESĮventyr (title means "Tales"), Reitzel (Copenhagen, Denmark), 1835, the first of many collections published between 18. Grants from the King of Denmark, 1833-35, for travel in Germany, France, Switzerland, and Italy Swedish Order of the Knight of the Polar Star, White Falcon of Weimar, Red Eagle of Prussia Order of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Honorary Danish Councillor of State. From the age of eleven, worked in a cloth factory, a tobacco factory, and later as an apprentice to a shoemaker tried unsuccessfully to become an actor, singer, and dancer. CareerĪuthor of fairy tales, playwright, novelist, and writer of travel books. Education: Schooled but illiterate at the age of fourteen, he began grammar school studies at the age of seventeen and finally attended the University of Copenhagen, passing degree examinations in 1829. Born April 2, 1805, in Odense, Denmark died of complications resulting from cancer of the liver, August 4, 1875, at Rolighed, near Copenhagen, Denmark son of Hans (a shoemaker) and Anne Marie (a washerwoman) Andersen.
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