The story of the wooden puppet who learns goodness and becomes a real boy is famous the world over, and has been familiar in English for over a century. From the moment Joseph the carpenter carves a puppet that can walk and talk, this wildly inventive fantasy takes Pinocchio through countless adventures, in the course of which his nose grows whenever he tells a lie, he is turned into a donkey, and is swallowed by a dogfish, before he gains real happiness. This new translation does full justice to the vibrancy and wit of Collodi's original. Far more sophisticated, funny, and hard-hitting than the many abridged versions (and the sentimentalized film) of the story would suggest, Ann Lawson Lucas's translation captures the complexity of Collodi's word-play, slapstick humour, and immediacy of dialogue. An adult reader will recognize social and political satire, and the invaluable introduction and notes illuminate the cultural traditions on which Collodi drew.
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I'm still the puppet sometime, and luckily I've got my own Fairy. Sometimes we despise the obidient fools, but the fact is we are more likely to be fool if not obidient, it requires wisdom the choose what or who to obey.
评分I'm still the puppet sometime, and luckily I've got my own Fairy. Sometimes we despise the obidient fools, but the fact is we are more likely to be fool if not obidient, it requires wisdom the choose what or who to obey.
评分The story is more realistic than the animation. It’s interesting to find out that when Pinocchio was a wooden boy, the world seems evil and something bad happened to him, while after he turns to be a real boy, it’s full of happiness. Well the real world always sucks, isn’t it?
评分The story is more realistic than the animation. It’s interesting to find out that when Pinocchio was a wooden boy, the world seems evil and something bad happened to him, while after he turns to be a real boy, it’s full of happiness. Well the real world always sucks, isn’t it?
评分I'm still the puppet sometime, and luckily I've got my own Fairy. Sometimes we despise the obidient fools, but the fact is we are more likely to be fool if not obidient, it requires wisdom the choose what or who to obey.
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