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Katharine Mary Briggs

Personal Information

Born November 8, 1898
Died October 15, 1980 (81 years old)
Hampstead, United Kingdom
Also known as: K. Briggs, Katherine Mary Briggs
33 books
4.3 (3)
165 readers

Description

Katharine Briggs was born in Hampstead, London in 1898, and was the eldest of three sisters. In 1954, the first Katharine Briggs book was published, titled The Personnel of Fairyland, a guide to the folklore of Great Britain. This was followed by Hobberdy Dick (1955), a children's story about a hobgoblin in Puritan England. Though these books brought a small amount of interest, it was not until the 1960s and 1970s, following the deaths of her sisters and mother, that Briggs became a renowned folklorist. In 1963 she published another children’s book, Kate Crackernuts, and became involved with the Folklore Society of the UK, later being elected as its president in 1967. Now a preeminent expert on fairy stories and folklore, she began to lecture across the country and by the 1970s she had been invited to give lectures in the United States and was regularly interviewed on television. In 1971 she published her masterpiece, the four-volume A Dictionary of Folk-Tales in the English Language. This work remains the definitive collection of British folk stories, becoming a vital resource for writers, academics and storytellers. [The Folio Society]

Books

Newest First

Folktales of England

0.0 (0)
17

Grade level: 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, s.

An encyclopedia of fairies

5.0 (1)
1

First ed. published under title: A dictionary of fairies. Lists entries on fairies and other supernatural creatures, and terms and phrases associated with them.

Abbey lubbers, banshees, & boggarts

0.0 (0)
1

A "Who's Who" of fairyland, with entries by fairy name and additional legends, songs, and anecdotes within each entry.