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We’ve all grown up knowing some Aesop’s fables – the hare and the tortoise, the fox and the grapes, the boy who cried wolf – but who is Aesop? As it turns out, Aesop was a slave, supposedly mute, but the man himself is legendised. It’s unclear whether the fables are actually his. I mean, sources attribute the fables to him, but it’s not clear whether he actually existed, and Aesopic fables turn into a genre, so that even Socrates, and people living centuries after Aesop supposedly did, composed
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It’s interesting that only about a half dozen of the 385 fables themselves in my edition were familiar, while most of the morals have become popular aphorisms still in use today.

You have to enjoy Aesop's Fables. It's a rule or something. Though some of them are trite and some of them are boring, they're still Aesop's Fables.
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Dec 29, 2009
Mandy Hornsby
marked it as to-read

Dec 09, 2010
Mackenzie
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Jun 23, 2019
Jillian (Peapod Historical Bookery)
marked it as to-read
Shelves:
classics,
folktales-tall-tales-fables-legends

Jan 02, 2020
Jonathan
marked it as to-read


Sep 05, 2020
Jeanne
is currently reading it