Reading Pushkin's fairy tales is to cultivate a deep, well-developed personality
Pushkin's fairy tales were written 2 centuries ago, but they are still relevant today. They raise the same life questions that confront a person, ridicule the same "familiar" vices: laziness, pride, greed, stinginess, envy, ignorance.
Our collection of Pushkin's "Fairy Tales" includes the most famous works of the Russian poet:
"The Tale of the Golden Cockerel";
"The Tale of the Fisherman and the Fish";
"The Tale of the Priest and His Worker Balda";
"The Song of the Prophetic Oleg".
In each of them, reality intertwines with the author's invention, resulting in a unique mix that immerses the reader, as if becoming a direct observer of the fairy tale events.
The fish that grants wishes, Balda's competition with the devil, the fulfilled prophecy for Prince Oleg, the golden cockerel signaling danger.
A child will remember Alexander Pushkin's fairy tales for life, and when grown up, will surely read them to their little ones.