🎁 Final Month Special: 15% OFF + Free Shipping on Most Items! Don't Miss Out - Shop Now! ✨

Shopping Cart

Sub Total: $0.00
Total: $0.00
Checkout

Search Products

The Story Giant Image 1
View Media Gallery
The Story Giant Image 2
View Media Gallery
The Story Giant Nav Image 1
The Story Giant Nav Image 2

The Story Giant

$4.00 $5.00


Tags:

company-hcuk customername-UK imprint-HarperCollins isbned-9780007469062 l1-Books l2-Fiction l2-Lifestyle sport and leisure l2-Non Fiction l2-Science Fiction & Fantasy l2-Self-Improvement & Colouring Books none productcode-FBC productcode-FNF productcode-FNM productcode-FV productcode-WZG source-feed storytelling;folklore;magic;fantasy;adventure;imagination;mythology;castle;dream;cultural;diversity;oral;tradition;fables;bedtime;cultures;storyteller;magical;realism subtype-normal version-5.0 wk-the-story-giant-brian-patten


Categories:

Books by Brian Patten
Estimated Delivery:
0 people are viewing this right now
Guaranteed Safe Checkout
Trust
Trust
  • Description

A magical story which weaves together fifty world tales – of immense appeal to both adults and children.

‘One day a story fell from heaven and landed on a giant’s tongue… ’

The Story Giant is a master illusionist and the ur-storyteller. In his memory exists every tale ever told in the world – except for one, which has eluded him for millennia.

In a last desperate attempt to track down this lost tale, he draws four children from the different corners of the globe into his castle while they sleep, there to exchange the tales they know from their own cultures, to see if between them they can piece together the elusive missing story. For if he cannot track it down and install it in his memory, the whole facade of the castle will crumble and fall, and the Story Giant himself will die. And if he does, so will all the stories, and the world will be a poorer, duller, grimmer place.

Fifty tales are told within this magical framework in Brian Patten’s inimitable style – from Bruh Rabbit to the tale of how St George killed the Dragon (except it wasn’t St George – it was his mother, with a pudding…) but none of them are the missing tale. The castle falls; the giant dies. But all is not lost – the four children dream themselves back to the ruins to concoct the missing tale themselves…