La Llorona Can't Scare Me / La Llorona No Me Asusta
by Xavier Garza
The Baobab That Opened Its Heart and Other Nature Tales for Children
by Michael Laitman
Shepherd and the Racehorse (Read It! Chapter Books) (Read-It! Chapter Books: Historical Tales)
by Susan Blackaby
Les Coutumes du Beauvoisis, Vol. 2 (Classic Reprint)
by Philippe de Beaumanoir
Tales of Norse Gods and Heroes (Oxford Illustrated Classics) (Oxford Myths & Legends)
by Barbara Leonie Picard
The Vikings told many stories of their gods: mighty Odin; Thor the god of thunder; gentle Freya; and Loki the mischief-maker and the tricks he played. In the stories, the gods are forced to always strive against the hated giants, who symbolize the pitiless northern snows and the grim mountains. These exciting and dramatic tales open with the beginning of all things, and follow the story through to the gods' final battle against the forces of winter.
La Leyenda de Las Muñecas Quitapenas
by Terilee Greeff and Hayley Moore
The Myths of the New World (a Treatise on the Symbolism and Mythology of the Red Race of America)
by G Daniel Brinton
A retelling of eleven animal folktales, includes The crocodile and the jackal, The coyote and the ravens, The turkey girl, and The impudent little bird.
When Max, an artist, departs for a long journey, the boy who is his friend and neighbor visits his apartment and discovers an exhibition of pictures created just for him.
Jack lives with his mother and when their cow stops giving milk Jack is sent to sell it. He exchangs the cow for magic beans. However, in anger his mother throws them out the window where they grow into a giant beanstalk. What adventures will jack find at the top of the beanstalk?
The Violet Fairy Book (Throne Classics) (Golden Classics, #64)
by Andrew Lang
The stories in this Violet Fairy Book, as in all the others of the series, have been translated out of the popular traditional tales in a number of different languages. These stories are as old as anything that men have invented. They are narrated by naked savage women to naked savage children. They have been inherited by our earliest civilised ancestors, who really believed that beasts and trees and stones can talk if they choose, and behave kindly or unkindly. The stories are full of the oldes...
Chanda and the Mirror of Moonlight (Folk Tales ) (Folktales S.)
by Margaret Bateson-Hill