Childhood Ruth Vernon Manning was the youngest of three daughters of John Manning, an English
Unitarian minister. She was born in
Swansea, Wales, but the family moved to
Cheshire when she was three. The family eventually moved into a cottage in the fishing
hamlet of
Land's End, Cornwall. One of their two children,
Joan Manning-Sanders (1913–2002), found fame as a teenage artist in the 1920s.
Literary career Manning-Sanders took to publishing dozens of fairy-tale anthologies, mostly during the 1960s and 1970s. She writes in the foreword to a 1971 anthology,
A Choice of Magic, that there can't be new fairy tales because they are "records of the time when the world was very young." She rather says that once upon a time is a door through which readers can enter the fairy world and enjoy its magic. Some of Manning-Saunders's fairy-tale compilations include a discursive foreword on the origins of the tales retold. The stories in
A Book of Dragons hail from Greece, China, Japan,
North Macedonia, Ireland, Romania, Germany and elsewhere. She goes out of her way to say "not all
dragons want to gobble up princesses." The book includes tales of kind and proud dragons, along with savage ones. In her foreword to
A Book of Witches, she offers insight into how she believed fairy tales should usually end, saying: She also notes in the foreword to
A Book of Princes and Princesses that all fairy tales have one thing in common: a happy ending. While many of Manning-Sanders's tales are not commonly known, she includes stories about more famous figures such as
Baba Yaga,
Jack the Giant-Killer,
Anansi,
Snow White,
Hansel and Gretel,
Robin Hood and
Aladdin. The dust jacket for
A Book of Giants notes "her wit and good humour. There is not a word wasted."
Death Manning-Sanders died in 1988 in
Penzance, England.
Marcus Crouch wrote in the February 1989 issue of
The Junior Bookshelf, "For many long-lived writers, death is followed by eclipse. I hope that publishers will continue to re-release Manning-Sanders's priceless treasury of folk-tales. We would all be the poorer for their loss." ==Books==