About Canadian Fairy Tales
A fable is a very short story which promises to illustrate or teach us a lesson which is also called a moral. Usually if not always, fables are stories having animal characters that talk like humans.
Canadian Fairy Tales is a collection of folktales and fairy tales
Canadian folklore is the traditional material that Canadians pass down from generation to generation, either as oral literature or "by custom or practice".[1] It includes songs, legends, jokes, rhymes, proverbs, weather lore, superstitions, and practices such as traditional food-making and craft-making. The largest bodies of folklore in Canada belong to the aboriginal and French-Canadian cultures. English-Canadian folklore and the folklore of recent immigrant groups have added to the country's folk.
Early English-Canadian folklore has several points of origin, due to the various settler groups that came to the country from England, Scotland, Ireland, and as Loyalists following the American Revolutionary War. Each group brought their own traditions and created new folklore in their new homeland. In the generations since the early settlers, waves of immigrants have come to Canada from around the world, adding their own folklore to the country's mix.
Jack and The Beanstalk, Teeny-Tiny, Binnorie, Three Little Pigs, Nix Nought Nothing, Tom Tit Tot, Jack the Giant-Killer and many more.
? The Princess and the Pea - for FREE
? The Beauty and the Beast
? Cinderella
? Sleeping Beauty
? The Three Little Pigs
? The Snow Queen
? Little Red Riding Hood
? Puss in Boots
? Gingerbread man
? Goldilocks and the three bears
? The Tinderbox
? Ugly Duckling
? Rumpelstiltskin
? The Three Spinners
? The Wolf and seven little kids
? The Enormous Turnip
? Mother Snow
? Aesop's Fables