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"Join The Preservation Underground". Our great friend Amy (keeper of all things Devil's Tale) named Preservation Underground and has been a great wealth of help and support.
Ballet unveiled American choreographer Lila York's The Handmaid's Tale, named after Canadian author Margaret Atwood's eponymous novel.
One particular tale names his lover "Ana", after his ship.
These stories, called otogizōshi, or Muromachi tales (named after the Muromachi period, 1337 to 1573), date from approximately the fourteenth through seventeenth centuries.
The unlikely marriage of the haughty, citified servant to the village lunatic, a tale-singer named Dul, is an excuse to bring in an allegorical artist; Dul is constantly being tied up by the villagers because of his dangerous songs, and he is able to speak only when he has a tambourine in his hands.
So he posted a tale about one named Stumpy who fended off a weasel attack.
Plato has Glaucon tell the tale: a shepherd named Gyges stumbles upon a ring that can make him invisible, then promptly uses it to bed a queen, slay her king, and claim the throne for himself.
In an Irish folk tale, a man named Stingy Jack once escaped the devil with one of these turnip lanterns.
In the tale, a peasant named Khun-Anup leaves his home in the Wadi-Natrun on a trading mission to fetch provisions for his children.
In "Hush", a group of fairy tale ghouls named "The Gentlemen" come to town and steal everyone's voices, leaving them unable to scream when The Gentlemen cut out their hearts.
In 1900, Potter revised a tale about a rabbit named Peter she had written for a child in 1893, and prepared a dummy book of it in imitation of Helen Bannerman's 1889 best-seller The Story of Little Black Sambo.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com