Sometimes I think of stories as animals. Some common, some rare, some endangered. There are stories that are old, like sharks, and stories as new on this earth as people or cats.

Cinderella, for example, is a story which, in its variants, has spread across the world as successfully as rats or crows. You’ll find it in every culture. Then there are stories like the Iliad, which remind me more of giraffes—uncommon, but instantly recognized whenever they appear or are retold. There are—there must be—stories that have become extinct, like the mastodon or the sabre-toothed tiger, leaving not even bones behind; stories that died when the people who told them died and could tell them no longer or stories that, long forgotten, have left only fossil fragments of themselves in other tales. We have a handful of chapters of the Satyricon, no more.

Neil Gaiman, “Introduction” to Caitlín R. Kiernan’s novelization of Robert Zemeckis’s Beowulf
(via tomtefairytaleblog)

I’d forgotten that this existed when we rounded up introductions for THE VIEW FROM THE CHEAP SEATS. 

(via neil-gaiman)

(via neil-gaiman)

  1. badooney7 reblogged this from funereal-disease
  2. islandcandy reblogged this from zanemalik
  3. zanemalik reblogged this from tomtefairytaleblog
  4. dontyellatmeyellowatme reblogged this from tomtefairytaleblog
  5. rebornhagiomaniac reblogged this from tomtefairytaleblog
  6. orchestralcricket reblogged this from tomtefairytaleblog
  7. valiha reblogged this from mysteriousflamingos
  8. mysteriousflamingos reblogged this from tomtefairytaleblog
  9. etherealpetrichor reblogged this from tomtefairytaleblog
  10. schroedingersbitch reblogged this from transhamlet
  11. windmillcrusader reblogged this from gayvillains
  12. hyaenadon reblogged this from transhamlet
  13. transhamlet reblogged this from gayvillains
  14. gayvillains reblogged this from tomtefairytaleblog
  15. lyrafay reblogged this from tomtefairytaleblog
  16. punkhippiegamer reblogged this from nerdonthecatwalk
  17. tomtefairytaleblog posted this