![]() Osborne includes one page of “Notes on the Story” beforeĮach of the nine folktales that give a historical background and context to the ![]() with a heavy heart (page 77)." These character are also described as "broad-shouldered and sunburned"(page 65) and individuals who grind their teeth "until he sounded like a hundred-horsepower sawmill.until he sounded like five thousand boulders tumbling down a mountainside (page 7)." Osborne uses these specific details to create multidimensional American folklore heroes. Soft and sweet as the evening breeze.” Pecos Bill says goodbye to his "four-legged friends. ![]() For example, Johnny Appleseed “talked to the animals and sang in a voice as Vulnerable and compassionate side of the tall-tale characters,” as a way ofįiltering out these negative messages while still remaining true to the tales. Native Americans, women, and animals.” Her tales attempt “to bring out the more Version of the tales in the introduction: "As I combed through old material to select which yarns to retell, Iįound it disheartening to come across stories that derided African Americans, ![]() Osborne states her reasoning for the way she constructed her ![]()
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