Complete collection of Russian fairy tales and Shevtsov. Complete collection of Russian fairy tales. Other books on similar topics

    2017

    Great Russian fairy tales. Collection by A. M. Smirnov. In 2 books (set)

    Literary studies. Folklore

    "Collection of Great Russian Fairy Tales" was published in two editions in Petrograd in 1917, since then the collection has not been reprinted for a long time and has become a rarity. Alexey Matveevich Smirnov-Kutachevsky, who was entrusted with the preparation of this collection by the Fairytale Commission of the Russian Geographical Society, included in it 367 fairy tales from many provinces? Russia, which allows the reader to appreciate all the richness and diversity of the fairy-tale tradition of our country. In publishing this collection, we have preserved the basic dialectal and phonetic features of the living speech of storytellers, only slightly simplifying the reading for the needs of the modern reader.

    2017

    Northern tales. Collection by I. E. Onchukov. In 2 books (set of 2 books)

    Literary studies. Folklore

    It is difficult to assess the significance of the work of fairy tale collectors who went on ethnographic expeditions, wrote down fairy tales, preserving the dialects of various regions of Russia in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Thanks to the painstaking work of such collectors as N.E. Onchukov, A.A. Shakhmatov, D. Georgievsky, M.M. Prishvin, you and I have the opportunity to read fairy tales in the form in which they existed among the people. Without remarks, without paraphrases and without distortion of meaning, which is inevitable with any adaptation of the text.

    Levshin Vladimir Arturovich 2017

    Russian fairy tales. In 2 books (set of 2 books)

    Prose

    The two-volume edition of Vasily Alekseevich Levshin is a rare edition. Material according to folk art Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin also borrowed from these tales. Some of the plots were borrowed by popular print artists to create their works. While submitting the edition of fairy tales to print, Vasily Alekseevich tried to create a “Library of Russian Novels.” He compares Russian heroes with European knights, and Russian fairy tales with European novels. Thus, he instills pride in the history of the Russian people: “With the intention of preserving this kind of our antiquities and encouraging people who have time to collect all this multitude.”

    Khudyakov Ivan 2017

    Complete collection of Russian fairy tales. Volume 6. Great Russian fairy tales. Great Russian riddles

    Literary studies. Folklore

    "Great Russian Tales" is the first collection in the history of Russian folklore, compiled from the collector's own records made in the central provinces of Russia and in Moscow. Another classic collection of I.A. Khudyakov, “Great Russian Riddles,” was compiled on the basis of archival materials of the Russian Geographical Society belonging to different regions of Russia. First edition 1860-1861. In just five years of collecting, Ivan Khudyakov managed to compile a fairly voluminous collection of fairy tales and riddles. Much can be said about the value of the collection; what makes it stand out is that it also contains riddles. And they can be a good puzzle to modern man, although for the peasant the answers were natural. In his introduction to the book, the collector notes best fairy tales collection, and also briefly writes about it: “Here we have placed thirty-seven folk tales, two sagas and a story about a witch. All of them were recorded by me personally in the cities of Tobolsk, Kazan, Moscow and in the village of Zholchina, Ryazan province. and county."

    2016

    Fairy tales and legends of the Samara region

    Literary studies. Folklore

    "Old honk on new way" - a collection of fairy tales that made up the main part of the volume. Reading the book, you are inspired by the depth of the Russian language, the beauty of the plots. Reading the “pre-notice” left by the author-compiler, a feeling of gratitude arises to the person who was able to preserve these pieces of Russian culture: “But maybe some will begin to grumble at me for this, for which I spent my time on that unimportant matter and for which I did not deal with something more important.

    Complete collection Russian fairy tales. The author of the series is A. Shevtsov. Ivanovo: Roshcha, 2016.

    From the very beginning of the Russian spiritual Renaissance, it should have been written on our pediments higher institutions- educational and not - something like this: “To know Russia means to know yourself.” But - how to know? And is Russia knowable in principle?

    The interest of the Russian intelligentsia in Russian folklore awoke a long time ago: in fairy tales, even two hundred years ago, a certain subtext was felt, or, more precisely, a national code, in which both the emotional architectonics of the people and an encrypted prophecy about their historical fate were discerned.

    Any linguist, and not necessarily an exalted esotericist or, on the contrary, a focused hermeneutic-heraldist, in contact with a fairy tale feels that he is dealing not with some abstract foxes and roosters, but with a typical (recommended for everyone) reaction of a conventional hero (Ivan, soldier, hare) to a by no means conditioned stimulus - a life conflict or a moral dilemma.

    As the publisher of the “Complete Collection of Russian Fairy Tales” Alexander Shevtsov writes, almost for the first time the question of cataloging fairy tale texts itself was raised by the Russian Geographical Society, created in 1845. However, the publications federal level" was never compiled.

    The deficiency was filled by A. Shevtsov himself: his team and the Ivanovo publishing house “Roshcha” made a truly heroic attempt to combine the research of the two previous centuries.

    At the same time, the publication compensates for the shortage not for scientists, but, first of all, for the mass reader: the author of the series publishes in the “Complete Collection...” only what has already passed the stage of scientific processing of the text. Thus, he began work on “The Complete Collection...” in the 1990s. with the famous folklorist, editor-in-chief of the almanac “Russian Archives”, laureate of the State Prize of the Russian Federation (1997) Alexei Nalepin, and in order to eliminate some ambiguities in the use of words of the 19th century. Scientists from the Russian Academy of Sciences and the Pushkin House were involved in the textual editing of the “Complete Collection...”.

    Today there are more than one and a half dozen volumes of the “Complete Collection...”. In them:

    Arkhangelsk fairy tales from the collection of N.E. Onchukov,

    Olonets fairy tales (according to the notes of A.A. Shakhmatov, teacher D. Georgievsky, M. M. Prishvin),

    Fairy tales and songs of the Belozersky region from the collection of B. and Y. Sokolovs,

    Russian and foreign tales and songs of Siberia from the notes of the Krasnoyarsk subdivision of the East Siberian department of the Russian Geographical Society,

    Northern tales from the collection of O.E. Ozerovskaya (books “Grandmother’s Antiquities” and “Five Speeches”),

    Tales from the book “A Cure for Thoughtfulness” (1782-1787), which contains the first printed Russian fairy tales,

    Fairy tales and riddles from the Great Russian collections of I.A. Khudyakov,

    Fairy tales of the Vyatka province from the collection of a member of the Russian Geographical Society D.K. Zelenin,

    Fairy tales from the book “An Old Horn in a New Way” (1794-1795),

    Great Russian fairy tales from the archive of the Russian Geographical Society, selected from it by A.M. Smirnov,

    Fairy tales and legends of the Samara region, collected by D.N. Sadovnikov,

    Collections of tales of rural teachers under the general editorship of A.A. Erlenwein and a collection of fairy tales, jokes and fables by E.A. Chudinsky,

    Fairy tales from the northern collections of I.V. Karnaukhova,

    East Siberian fairy tales by M.K. Azadovsky,

    Collection of fairy tales by A.K. Baryshnikova,

    Fairy tale collection by B. Bronitsyn and I. P. Sakharov,

    A fabulous two-volume book by V.A. Levshin.

    The collection is truly impressive. Today, every superficial connoisseur of the subject can reproach it for its deliberate incompleteness, however, despite the apparent vulnerability of the “Complete Collection...”, it is precisely, in contrast to strictly scientific ones, magnificent, but - what a shame! - unimplemented projects exist.

    The content alone will make any head spin: in more than half of these tales, none of them modern people didn't read it at all. This is where the abysses are!

    Have you heard anything about “The Warlock Tsar” or “Ivan Tsarevich in the Underworld”? Maybe about a creation called “I, or not I?” - pure Khodasevich! - or about “Flying Son”?

    An inscrutable chthonic horror emanates from such things as “The Grateful Dead” or “Self-Immolation,” but adjacent to them are the mysterious “Careless Monastery” and the cursed by God, but certainly magnificent “Babylon the City.” Both despair and happiness - choose which one.

    By the way, here is Gogol - “On the Lesh to St. Petersburg,” an Arkhangelsk unprecedented, by Savva Yakovlevich Korotkikh. Or here’s a thriller, the art of naming which the authors of modern dull detective stories should learn from - “The Dead Body of Ivan the Red Face” from grandmother Ovdotya...

    The Russian world turns out to be permeable through and through with echoes of the West and East - either you go to heaven yourself (a good third of the plots are a feat of walking), then Christ himself will easily knock on your door. Not only sorcerers and devils - and King Peter, and King Solomon, and the Pope!

    How do you like the Biysk (Tomsk province) “The legend that formerly kings were brought by the devil from the East”?

    ...The purpose of this brief information one: mention of a unique publication that may get lost in the information flow. But until this happens, know: “The meeting...” exists.

    Sergey Arutyunov

    “Publishing house “Roshcha” Complete collection of Russian fairy tales Strange as it may seem, but in Russia, where almost the largest collection in the world has been collected and published...”

    FULL

    MEETING

    RUSSIAN FAIRY TALES

    A. Shevtsov

    Publishing house

    Complete collection

    Russian fairy tales

    Strange as it may seem, but in Russia, where it was collected and published

    there is almost the largest number of fabulous stories in the world

    texts, there is nothing similar to the Complete Russian Collection

    fairy tales This is all the more strange since the task of “bringing it into

    news all Russian fairy tales kept in the treasury people's memory“, the Fairytale Commission of the Russian Geographical Society, created in 1845, set itself. In fact, it still sounds in the works of leading folklorists, when the creation of a Complete Code of Russian folklore or epic songs is discussed. Nevertheless, things are still there.

    Perhaps publishers are intimidated by the volume of work. Already in the pre-war period, the volume of collected published and unpublished fairy-tale material was about ten thousand issues. A considerable amount of it has increased over the last decades, thanks to the constant work of many folklore expeditions that go out annually to gather. However, ten thousand issues is by no means an exorbitant figure, especially considering that usually a fairy tale collection contains from one hundred to two hundred issues. Secondly, fairy tales are still constantly published and republished. Why not do this within a single meeting?! Obviously, if anything poses a real difficulty, it is the “correct” preparation of the publication, for which an entire scientific team must be created, and even from the best specialists in this fabulous branch for each collection.



    However, our publishing house sets itself the task of creating, rather, not a scientific, but a Popular fairy-tale collection, that is, a collection that could be read by ordinary readers, severely deprived lately attention of scientists. Publications of folklore of all kinds in recent decades have grown into science for science's sake. This is manifested, first of all, not so much in the premise of long and over-complicated articles for each collection, but in the complete unreadability of a fully recorded fairy-tale text for non-sacred people. Many special superscript symbols, letters completely incomprehensible to modern Russian people, distort the meaning and turn it into a kind of secret language intended for folklorists. At the same time, there is still no textbook that would tell where all this secret writing came from and how to learn it.

    All these difficulties certainly arise from the worldview of the fairy tale publisher. In other words, what do you want? Why are you doing this?

    And if we ask this question, we will see that the scientific approach is completely justified, but for science - as a way of studying and preserving Russian cultural heritage in a museum-esoteric form. If we see our task as preserving this heritage as living and even popular culture, we must speak the living Great Russian language of today.

    The presence of a popular, but at the same time complete collection provides definite benefits to the reader - a person interested in Russian culture, even possessing individual series from any folklore Complete Collection, also has a certain image of what Russian culture is in the part that this series covers. Scattered publications, especially well-made ones from a scientific point of view, often kill people’s interest in culture, because they instill in them a feeling of the unknowability of this topic, and often a feeling of their own insignificance, in comparison with “real experts.”

    We would like the non-professional reader of Russian fairy tales to have, thanks to our Complete Collection, a feeling and cognizability of this world in in full, and even the fact that he owns it, he is the owner. And if any question arises, he just needs to stretch out his hand to the shelf, and there he will probably find a hint, if not the complete answer.

    In this sense, the Full Assembly will certainly play the role of a unique fairytale encyclopedia, not only containing texts, but, thanks to accompanying articles and the completeness of coverage of the material, providing knowledge about the world.

    In our opinion, Russian fairy tales should be published popularly in order to remain fairy tales of the Russian people.

    However, popular does not mean distorted. We consider all changes in the texts of fairy tales related to spelling and speech features acceptable only in relation to those texts that have already been published in full scientifically. The presence of such source text will allow us to make an appropriate reference for specialists so that they can work with the original. Regarding the publication of previously unpublished recordings of fairy tales, we share the modern scientific point of view: folklore should be published by folklorists.

    We do not intend to start with these publications. A great deal of work has already been done by the collectors of the past. Whether they did their job scientifically or unscientifically, in the opinion of a modern folklorist, now it doesn’t matter, because their publications themselves are already a fact of our history and culture. These are the ones we intend to republish first, one to one, without any changes in the text, with the exception of the same spelling.

    Such a reissue will allow the reader not only to have an idea of ​​the world of Russian fairy tales, but will also show how the collection, study and publication of fairy tales was carried out from the very first moment, when someone managed to discern a fairy tale as something special, independently living, something that could be lost and therefore worth storing.

    And to be honest, it is in the Russian fairy tale that the Russian soul is described, which they began to not only forget, but also expel from our lives in recent times.

    Losing a soul is death, even for a people.

    –  –  –

    A Cure for Thoughtfulness and

    INSOMNIA

    or real Russian fairy tales (1786)

    2. The tale of the glorious and strong 4. The tale of the seven Semyons, the knight Eruslan Lazarevich, his siblings about his courage and unimaginative 5. The tale of Ignatius the princely beauty of the princess and of Suvor the invisible peasant Anastasia Vokhrameevna

    3. The Tale of the Brave and Bold 6. The Tale of Ivanushka the Fool Cavalier Ivan Tsarevich and 7. The Tale of Sila the Tsarevich and his beautiful wife Ivashka, the white shirt of his Tsar Maiden

    GRANDFATHER'S WALKS

    or continuation of real Russian fairy tales (1786)

    8. The Tale of Bulat the Well done Ibrahimovich and the Beautiful Tale of the Shepherd and the Wild Princess Salikalla Boar 13. The Tale of Very Wonderful and

    10. The tale of the beloved prince and the beautiful harp, the self-beautiful princess, his springer, and the winged wolf 14. The tale of the seven wise men and

    11. The Tale of a Dog and a Young Man

    12. The tale of the glorious and the name - 15. The tale of a certain shoemaker, that prince Malandrakh and his servant Pritychkin

    16. The Tale of Ivan Tsarevich, 17. The Tale of the Nice and Brave Firebird and gray wolf Knight Beauvais the Prince

    1. The Tale of Vasilisa the Golden 4. The Tale of Ivan Kruchin, the merchant, unveiled beauty, and his son Ivan the Pea 5. The Tale of the Silver Saucer

    2. The Tale of the Hero Gol Voyan and the Bulk Apple

    3. The Tale of the Unlucky Gunman

    –  –  –

    REFERENCES

    I.P. Sakharova List of Russian fairy tales Indexes Bibliographic list Index of plots B. Bronnitsyn. “Russian folk tales with names” (1838) Index of objects I.P. Sakharov. "Russians na- Dictionary little-used native tales" (1841) and regional words Complete collection of Russian fairy tales

    –  –  –

    Part nine

    16. The Tale of the Bogatyr Bulat The Tale of the Golden Vessel The Own Adventures of the Bogatyr Bulat The Adventures of the Bogatyr Sidon Continuation of the Bulat Adventures Part Ten

    17. The Adventures of Balamir, the Sovereign of the Uns The Tale of Tsarevich Dobroslav The Continuation of Balamir's Adventures The Adventures of the Crazy Ringer The Shoemaker's Tale The Adventures of Zelian, nicknamed the Stranger The Tale of the Sorceress Zimonia The Story of the King of Wizards

    –  –  –

    Roshcha Publishing House LLC

    Ivanovo, Lenina Ave., 17, PO Box 11 sobranieskazok.ru www.roscha-akademii.ru [email protected]

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    Onchukov Nikolai Evgenievich (1872-1942). Northern tales. Sat. In 2 books. St. Petersburg, Troyanov Path, 1998, 2006. Ill., dictionaries of regional words; TV p.t. Book 1. 2006. 476 p. Book 2. 1998. 348 pp., Index of names and objects. Shooting gallery 500, 5000 copies. respectively. “Full. collection Russian fairy tales. Pre-revolutionary meetings." T. 1.

    Pisakhov Stepan Grigorievich (1879-1960). Ice Bell Tower: Tales and Essays. [For children of high school age. Comp. L. Yu. Shulman; artist: I. Burmagina, A. F. Sergeev]. M., Sov. Russia; imprint in Elektrostal, 1992. 320 pp., ill., Dictionary of little-known words and expressions; TV p.t. Shooting gallery 50,000 copies "Living Russian word."

    Pogorelsky A[tony]. Black chicken[,] or Underground inhabitants: Fairy tale for children. Il. Georgy Yudin. M., Planet; imprint in Kaliningrad, 2009. 60 p., portrait. auto with nephew Lesha Tolstoy; ill.; TV p.t. Format 60x90 1/8. Shooting gallery 3000 copies

    Poetic tales of Russian writers: [Tales of A. S. Pushkin, V. A. Zhukovsky and P. P. Ershov. For primary and secondary school age]. Artist T. Nikitina. M., Bustard-Plus, 2004. 382 pp., ill., notes; TV p.t. Shooting gallery 10,000 copies "Children's Reading Circle"

    Propp Vladimir Yakovlevich (1895-1970). Russian fairy tale. Rep. ed.: D.I. Sc., corresponding member. USSR Academy of Sciences K. V. Chistov, Ph.D. n. V. I. Eremin; [intro. Art. K.V. Chistova]. L., Leningrad University Publishing House; imprint in Sortavala, 1984. 336 p. + l. with care; TV p.t. Shooting gallery 10,000 copies

    Pushkin Alexander Sergeevich. Fairy tales. Il. B. [V.] Zvorykina. M., Wordplay; imprint in Mozhaisk, 2008. 128 pp., ill., note, about B.V. Zvorykin; TV p.t. Format 220x298 mm. Shooting gallery 3000 copies

    Russian fairy tale. Selected masters. In 2 vols. Ed. and comm. M. Azadovsky. 1932. T. 1: 424 p., ill. Shooting gallery 10,100 copies; 2: 416 p., ill. Shooting gallery 11-20 thousand copies.

    Russian everyday fairy tale. Everyday tales, as well as tales, folk anecdotes, parables, fables and sayings that were in use among Russian people in the 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th and 20th centuries, were selected from old and new books and manuscripts by Vladimir Bakhtin. [Preface Vladimir Bakhtin; artist S. A. Ostrov.] Lenizdat, 1987. 512 pp., ill., notes; TV p.t. Shooting gallery 300,000 copies "B-ka of folk poetic creativity."

    Russian treasured tales. [From the collection of A. N. Afanasyev, “without any changes,” published in Geneva in 1872] M., Moscow Book Yard, 1992. 160 pp., ill.; mgk. p.t. Shooting gallery 100,000 copies

    Russian folk tales. Comp., intro. Art. and note. V. P. Anikina. Artist: E. Korotkova, N. Kochergin and others. M., Pravda; imprint in Minsk, 1985. 575 p., ill., Local and outdated words+ Soyuzglavvtorresursy’s appeal to readers about the collection of waste paper, which has been ongoing since 1974; TV p.t. Shooting gallery 500,000 copies

    Russian folk tales. In 3 volumes. 2nd ed. Comp. Yu. G. Kruglova. M., Sov. Russia, 1992. T. 1. Tales of animals, fairy tales. 448 p., ill. T. 2. Fairy tales. 512 p., ill. T. 3. Social and everyday tales. 544 p., ill.

    Russian folk tales. Illustrations by Elena Polenova*. For children of primary school age. M., Fortuna EL; imprint in Tver, 2007. 128 p., ill.; Natalya Polenova. She lived in magical world fairy tales; TV p.t. Format 84x108 1/16. Boom. chalk. *Elena Dmitrievna Polenova (1850-1898), sister of the artist V.D. Polenova, one of the first Russian illustrators, graphic artist, painter, master of decorative and applied arts. Such masters as I. Bilibin, S. Malyutin, G. Narbut, D. Mitrokhin considered themselves her students and followers. A. N. Benois: “Polenova has earned herself the eternal gratitude of Russian society because she was the first of the Russian artists to pay attention to the most artistic field life - on children's world, to his strange, deeply poetic fantasy." Shooting gallery 3000 copies "Book Collection".

    Russian folk tales. Il. B.V. Zvorykina. M., Wordplay; imprint in Mozhaisk, 2008. 86 p., ill., article about B.V. Zvorykin; TV p.t. Format 220x298 mm. Shooting gallery 3000 copies

    Russian folk tales.[Selection of illustrations by S. Kalinin.] M., Eksmo; imprint in China, 2008. 896 pp.; ill.; TV p.t. Golden edge. Shooting gallery 4000 copies "Book as a gift."

    Russian folk tales. The text is reproduced from the ed. A. N. Afanasyeva. [Afterword I. I. Komarova; artist Ivan Yakovlevich Bilibin (1876-1942)]. M., Wordplay; imprint in Mozhaisk, 2009. 160 pp., ill., note; TV p.t. Format 220x298 mm. Shooting gallery 3000 copies

    Russian folk tales. Illustrations by Nikolai Kochergin. [For children of primary school age.] Design by Oksana Lebedeva-Skochko. M., ID NIGMA; imprint in Riga, 2012. 120 pp., ill.; TV p.t. Format 70x100 1/8. [Boom. chalk.] The front side of the cover is embossed. Shooting gallery 5000 copies "The Legacy of N. Kochergin."

    Russian folk tales. Collections by B. Bronnitsin and I. Sakharov. [The publication was prepared by K. E. Korepova] // IRLI RAS, Nizhny Novgorod State. University named after N.I. Lobachevsky. St. Petersburg, Troyanov Path, 2007. 191 p., ill., indexes of subjects, names and objects; Dictionary of rarely used and regional words; TV p.t. Shooting gallery 800 copies “Full. collection Russian fairy tales. Early meetings." T. 15.

    Russian folk tales for the little ones. Illustrations by Nikolai Kochergin. Design by Oksana Lebedeva-Skochko. M., ID NIGMA; imprint in Riga, 2012. 120 pp., ill.; TV p.t. Format 70x100 1/8. [Boom. chalk.] The front side of the cover is embossed. Shooting gallery 5000 copies "The Legacy of N. Kochergin."

    Russian folk tales of Karelian Pomerania. Comp. and ed. preface: A. P. Razumova, T. I. Senkina. Ed. K. philol. n. I. M. Kolesnitskaya; artist M. S. Mayofis // USSR Academy of Sciences (Karelian branch). Petrozavodsk, “Karelia”; imprint in Sortavala, 1974. 424 p., ill.; note, Inventory of collections of texts of fairy tales of Karelian Pomerania from the archives of the Karelian branch of the USSR Academy of Sciences; Plot Index, Dictionary local words; TV p.t. Shooting gallery 10,000 copies

    Russian fairy tales in early recordings and publications (XVI- XVIIIcentury). Prepare text, intro. Art. and comm. N.V. Novikova. Rep. ed. E. V. Pomerantseva // Institute of Ethnography named after. N. N. Miklouho-Maclay. L., Nauka (Leningrad department), 1971. 288 pp.; “A Journal of Pleasant, Curious and Amusing Reading” (1804): Popova’s Cow; comm., Dictionary of rarely used and regional words + l. with care; TV p.t. Shooting gallery 10,000 copies

    Russian fairy tales and epics. Comp. P. N. Petrov. St. Petersburg, 1875. Facsimile edition. M., Sergei Stolyarov Foundation, 1999. 200 pp., ill. Shooting gallery 3000 copies

    Russian fairy tales and songs in Siberia. Notes of the Krasnoyarsk Subdivision of the East Siberian Department of the Imperial Russian Geographical. Society for Ethnography of St. Petersburg, Troyanov Path, 2000. 606 p., ill.; TV p.t. Shooting gallery 3000 copies “Full. collection Russian fairy tales. Pre-revolutionary meetings." T. 3.

    Russian fairy tales and fables: Folk tales collected by rural teachers: Sat. A. A. Erlenwein; Russian folk tales, jokes and fables: Sat. E. A. Chudinsky. The publication was prepared by E. A. Kostyukhin. St. Petersburg, Troyanov's path. 2005. 287 p., ill.; TV p.t. Shooting gallery 500 copies “Full. collection Russian fairy tales. Early meetings." T. 11.

    Russian Eros. Bath: [Treasured tales. In the province of N-skoy: Tale, stories. Russian Eros is not for ladies: Poems: Sat.] Preface. L. A. Mezinova; artist G. Z. Komarov. M., Mister X; imprint in Mozhaisk, 1994. 416 p., ill.; TV p.t. Shooting gallery 50,000 copies “Sex feast. Pearls of intimate literature. Russian erotic classics." T. 4. Ch. ed. series by L. A. Mezinov.

    Tales of the Belozersky region. Recorded by B. M. and Yu. M. Sokolov. Published according to ed. 1915, M. Comp. and comm. K-ta philol. n. L. V. Fedorova. Dialectological preparation. K-ta philol. n. L. P. Komyagina. Preface L. V. Fedorova and L. P. Komyagina; entry Art. K-ta philol. n. A. I. Balandina. Arkhangelsk, Severo-Zapadnoye kn-vo; imprint in Vologda, 1981. 336 pp., ill.; TV p.t. Shooting gallery 85,000 copies ["Russian North."]

    Fairy tales and fables in illustrations by Georgy Narbut. M., Fortuna EL; imprint in Yaroslavl, 2010. 128 p., ill.; Lyudmila Dorofeeva. Book art by Georgy Narbut; TV p.t. Format 84x108 1/16. Boom. chalk. Shooting gallery 3000 copies "Book Collection".

    Tales of Zaonezhye. Comp. N. F. Onegina. Petrozavodsk, Karelia, 1986. 286 p.

    Fairy tales and songs of the Belozersky region. Collection of B. and. Yu. Sokolov*. Book 1, 2. Published from the publisher: St. Petersburg, 1915. Portrait of collectors, ill.; TV p.t. St. Petersburg, Troyanov's Path, 1999. Book. 1: [Preface co-chairman of the “Hope and Support” movement Alina Radchenko; entry Art. T. G. Ivanova; articles by collectors. 800 pp., portrait of collectors, ill. Fairy tales; Applications: Presentation fairy tales, Name and subject index to fairy tales, Dictionary of local and obscure words]. 800 s. Book 2: Intro. Art. I. B. Teplova; articles by collectors. Songs: epic, ritual, round dance, lyrical - family, love, recruit, soldier, prison, children's, humorous, folk adaptations of poems and romances, turntables, ditties; Proverbs and sayings, Riddles, Fortune telling at Christmas time, Love spells, lapels, conspiracies, folk medicine and omens. Appendices: Alphabetical list of songs, list of performers indicating their repertoire, List of villages in which recordings were made; Dictionary of local and obscure words. 703. *Boris Matveevich and Yuri Matveevich Sokolov (1889-1930 and 1889-1941, respectively), twin brothers, folklorists. Shooting gallery 3000, 2500 copies. “Full. collection Russian fairy tales. Pre-revolutionary meetings." T. 2 [in two books] Main series. Fairytale Commission of the Society of Russian Folk Culture in 1998 Artist. I am dark.

    Tales of the Karelian White Sea region. T. 1. Tales of M. M. Korguev. Notes by A. Nechaev. Preface M. Azadovsky. Petrozavodsk, Karelian state. publishing house, 1939. 660 p.

    Tales of Kuprianikha. Records 1925-1942. Comp., intro. art., comm. and dictionary by M. A. Nikiforova // IRLI RAS. St. Petersburg, Troyanov Path, 2007. 366 pp., ill., Applications; TV p.t. Shooting gallery 1000 copies “Full. collection Russian fairy tales. Pre-war meetings". T. 14.

    Fairy tales, stories, fables, ballads, poems in illustrations by Dmitry Mitrokhin*. M., Fortuna EL; imprint in Yaroslavl, 2013. 128 p., ill.; M. Ya. Chapkina. Mitrokhin illustrates books for children; TV p.t. Format 84x108 1/16. Boom. chalk. *Dmitry Isidorovich Mitrokhin (1883-1973), master of easel engraving, etching and lithography. Shooting gallery 3000 copies "Book Collection".

    Fairy tales of Russian writersXIXcentury: [Tales of V. A. Zhukovsky, N. A. Polevoy, S. T. Aksakov, V. F. Odoevsky, Anthony Pogorelsky, V. I. Dahl, K. D. Ushinsky, M. L. Mikhailov, M. E. Saltykov-Shchedrin, L. N. Tolstoy, D. N. Mamin-Sibiryak and N. G. Garin-Mikhailovsky. For middle school age]. Artist T. Nikitina. M., Bustard-Plus; imprint in Tver, 2004. 415 p., ill.; TV p.t. Shooting gallery 10,000 copies "Children's Reading Circle"

    Fairy tales of the Russian people. Text and illus. are published according to the publications: “Fairy tales of the Russian people. Selected, presented and edited by V. A. Gatsuk.” Issues I-XX, M., 1902-1912. Il. artists A. Apsit, N. Bogatov, V. Spassky, R. Schneider, S. Yaguzhinsky and others. External design by A. Borovich. M., EOS; imprint in Yaroslavl, 1992. 416 pp., ill.; TV p.t. Shooting gallery 100,000 copies

    Khudyakov Ivan Alexandrovich (1842-76). Great Russian fairy tales. Great Russian riddles. The publication was prepared by: Dr. Philol. Sc., prof. E. A. Kostyukhin and candidate of education. n. L. G. Belikova. T. 6. St. Petersburg, Troyanov Path, 2001. 479 pp., ill., notes, dictionaries; TV p.t. Shooting gallery 3000 copies “Full. collection Russian fairy tales. Early meetings." T. 6.

    Charskaya L. A. A fairy tale: Stories: [Princess Javakha, Lesovichka, A fairy tale. For young readers. Comp. and entry Art. Art. S. Nikonenko; artist N. A. Abakumov]. M., Press; imprint in Kurgan, 1994. 560 p., ill.; TV p-t, superreg. Shooting gallery 100,000 copies

    Charskaya L. A. Tales of the Blue Fairy. Reprint. reproduction ed.: 2nd ed. SPb.-M., Publishing house T-va M. O. Wolf, 1909. Editor V. B. Fursova; ill. V. Melnikova, Z. Shapiro, A. M. Baltsera and others; vignettes by A. Balzer; artistic design V. A. Plotnova. M., Profizdat, 1992. 152 pp., ill.; mgk. p.t. Shooting gallery 50,000 copies

    Chulkov M. D. Mockingbird, [or Slavic Tales]. Comp., prepared. texts, afterword and note. V. P. Stepanova; artist A. M. Getmansky. M., Sov. Russia; imprint in Elektrostal, 1988. 368 pp., portrait. author, ill.; TV p.t. Add. shooting gallery 125,000 copies.