Histoires ou Contes du temps passé avec des moralités by Charles Perrault

(8 User reviews)   1009
By Jamie Reyes Posted on Jan 2, 2026
In Category - Companion Stories
Perrault, Charles, 1628-1703 Perrault, Charles, 1628-1703
French
Ever wonder where Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood, and Sleeping Beauty really came from? This is it—the original 1697 collection that started it all. Forget the Disney versions. Perrault's tales are sharper, weirder, and often way darker. They're full of hungry wolves, wicked stepmothers, and impossible tasks. But here's the real hook: each story ends with a pointed moral, a little lesson that makes you think twice. It's not just about the 'happily ever after'; it's about the cleverness, the warnings, and the sly social commentary hidden in the enchanted forest. If you love fairy tales, you need to meet their sophisticated, slightly unsettling French godfather.
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Okay, let's clear something up first. This isn't a single story. It's the famous 1697 story collection that gave us the classic versions of Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood, Sleeping Beauty, Puss in Boots, and Bluebeard. Perrault didn't invent these tales from scratch—he polished up old folk stories and wrote them down with a witty, literary flair that made them stick.

The Story

There isn't one plot. Instead, you get a series of short, potent narratives. A clever cat wins his master a fortune. A girl in a red cloak ignores her mother's advice with terrible consequences. A young woman discovers her husband's horrifying secret in a locked room. Each tale is a compact engine of conflict: good versus evil, cunning versus brute force, curiosity versus obedience. The endings aren't always neat, and the 'heroes' often win through trickery, not just virtue.

Why You Should Read It

Reading Perrault is like finding the source code for our collective imagination. The themes are timeless—resourcefulness, danger, justice—but the delivery is surprisingly spiky. The morals at the end are the best part. They're not just for kids; they're sharp, sometimes ironic observations about society, like warnings about predatory men or advice on choosing a wise husband. It shows how these stories were always meant to be more than entertainment; they were teaching tools with a bite.

Final Verdict

Perfect for fairy tale fans who want to go beyond the sanitized versions, and for anyone curious about the roots of modern storytelling. It's a quick, fascinating read that packs a punch. You'll never look at a glass slipper or a big, bad wolf the same way again.

Edward Lopez
2 weeks ago

Once I began reading, the presentation of ideas feels natural and engaging. This book will stay with me for a long time.

Deborah Martin
2 months ago

I had low expecctations initially, however the depth of coverage exceeded my expectations. Truly inspiring.

Linda Nguyen
2 months ago

This stood out immediately because the clarity of the writing makes this accessible to a wide audience. I will be reading more from this author.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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