The Complete Fables
By (Author) Aesop
Introduction by Robert Temple
Translated by Robert Temple
Translated by Olivia Temple
Penguin Books Ltd
Penguin Classics
24th April 1998
29th January 1998
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Classic fiction: general and literary
Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval
888.0108
Paperback
288
Width 129mm, Height 197mm, Spine 16mm
214g
A translation of the complete Aesopian corpus of fables. The introduction pays particular attention to the transmission of fable "stock" from sanscrit to Aesop. It also attends to the precise nature of the animals themselves who appear in these fables, and tries to rescue the fables both from a tradition of moralistic interpretation and from the academic perception of the genre as an exclusively populist one.
Aesop lived in the early sixth century BC on the island of Samos, which lies off the coast of modern Turkey. He originally came from Thrace which was a separate country in those days, though it now forms part of Greece and Bulgaria. Very little is known about his life except that he worked as a slave on Samos for a master called Iadmon, and that he became a very famous storyteller. He was so famous that almost any fable which could have been told by him became attributed to him.