The Seven Ravens

A little girl walks to the end of the world to find her seven brothers and free them from enchantment.

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Excerpt

There was once a baby girl as beautiful as the sun is hot, as brave as the moon is cold and as gentle and faithful as the stars are bright. Her parents loved her. Yet as she grew, she saw that they were not happy. In the mornings, her mother would sing as she brushed her daughter’s long dark hair, but her songs were sad. In the evenings, her father would laugh as he lifted her high above his head into the air, but when she looked into his eyes, she saw shadows there. 

One day, while chasing a ball, the little girl crawled under her parents’ bed and came upon seven dusty boxes. She opened them and found in each a neatly folded shirt, delicately sewn in colors of the rainbow with patterns of the sun, moon and stars. They were so finely embroidered, only her mother could have made them.

That night at dinner, the girl wore the smallest of the shirts, hoping to make her mother smile. But her mother covered her face with her hands and began to weep.

“Your poor brothers,” she moaned, rocking back and forth. “Your poor, poor brothers.” Her mother told the little girl of a time when she had seven strong brothers, each more handsome than the last...

“They disappeared into the clear blue sky,”  said her father. The girl looked into his eyes. She counted seven black shadows there and knew there was more to the story than that.

“I’ll find them,” she promised, resting her head on her father’s shoulder. “I’ll bring them home.” 

“What’s done is done,” he said, shaking his head, and the shadows in his eyes spread through the house, darkening every crack and corner. That night the little girl could not sleep.  Just before dawn, she left her bed. Taking only a loaf of bread, a jug of water, and a wooden stool, she went out into the wide world to find her brothers...

  • A New York Times Bookshelf selection |  Recommended by The Daily News | Recommended by The Boston Sunday Globe

    “The poetic, immediate style of this deeply satisfying adaptation honors the Grimm tradition.Geringer adds elements that make the connections between the characters more tangible…Gaszi’s meticulously textured and luminous paintings gorgeously illuminate the fantastical journey." 

    —Publisher’s Weekly, Starred review

    “This new version by Laura Geringer adapting the (Grimm) story into a more feminist  quest is felicitously written. The words are spare, poetic and read well. The illustrations by Edward Gaszi are mysterious and other worldly, the stuff of dreams.” — The Five Owls

    “The language is spare yet elegant and beautifully complemented by the richly colored paintings. Gaszi’s use of light and shadow and the nearly photographic quality of the characters’ faces are especially distinctive. This polished offering will be a welcome addition to any folktale collection." — Booklist

    “Laura Geringer’s retelling of The Seven Ravens dimensionalizes the Grimms’ story of seven brothers turned into ravens and the loving, courageous sister who seeks to free them. Geringer softens Grimms’ harshness with her lovely fairy tale cadences and images. Gaszi’s paintings have a strong feeling quality that deepen the old tale. The artist demonstrates his deftness (by) noting the nuances of the heroine’s moods as she struggles to reunite her family.” —Children’s Book Review, featured book

    “What is refreshing about Geringer’s rendition of this tale’s ancient theme is that the changes she has made from the Brothers Grimm version do no damage to the spirit of the original and that her language and imagery are neither condescending nor sentimental. She understands the fairy tales are lapidary odysseys of the spirit, expressing through symbolism the psychological necessities of courage, redemption and transformation.” —Scripps Howard News Service

    “Awe-inspiring!” —Courier Times-Telegraph

  • When I was a child, I loved a small book published in 1946 called The Seven Ravens, illustrated with color photographs of dolls. I treasured the tale because, although it featured seven strong boys, the girl was in fact its bold heroine. I especially liked the illustration in which the girl leaves home, crossing the threshold into adventure, carrying her jug, her loaf of bread, and her small chair. She finds herself in a forest where,like Snow White, she must seek her way all alone with only animals and a few mushrooms to keep her company.

    Many years later, while talking about fairy tales with my editor, I had a memory flash of The Seven Ravens and searched through my shelves until I found it. The book was so well worn it had all but lost its binding. Still later, I went back to the original Grimm Brothers, and read translations by Margaret Hunt, Jack Zipes, and Ralph Manheim. In each, the plot remained basically the same. The beleaguered father loses his temper and lets fly the curse that transforms his male children into birds. In each, the girl encounters the sun, the moon, and the stars in her quest for reunion. In each, her powers of courage, faith in forgiveness, and love are tested to the limit. I decided to retell The Seven Ravens as I would if I were reading it aloud to my own children. It seemed to me there should be some possession of the girl’s that goes with the brothers in their flight. So I added the baby rattle, making it the eldest brother’s talisman and the first thing the girl sees when she enters the Glass Mountain. 

    It seemed right that, in the end, the eldest raven brother should shake the rattle, dispelling the evil influence of that long ago paternal curse and heralding a new time when the family could come together again, close and whole. If the raven brothers kept something of the girl’s, it seemed only natural that she take something of theirs too—something that would lead her to them, protect her, and tie her to their shared past. That thought, in combination with my memory of another Grimm tale, The Twelve Brothers, resulted in the seven embroidered shirts making their way into the story.

    The girl, wearing the shirts one on top of the other, sets out into the wide world. That is, she starts her quest (as many of us do) swaddled in layers of family history. The seven shirts took on more and more importance as I went along until they became the device by which the ravens change back into boys.

    The Seven Ravens is one of the more cheerful of the Grimm tales, although in the original, the girl must sacrifice one of her fingers to gain entry into the Glass Mountain, an event I eliminated. I chose to emphasize instead the psychological sacrifice of growing up in a household that harbored so shadowy a secret.

    The illustrator, Ed Gazsi, was drawn to the story because it offers a moral framework. A father of four himself, he liked a tale in which the father could lose his temper, suffer terrible seemingly irreparable consequences (“What’s done is done”),  but finally be forgiven. The story offered him unlimited opportunity for flights of fancy but was, at the same time, grounded in a world in which the order of things is restored, reinforcing the love between brother and sister, brother and brother, and parent and child. 

    The process of re-telling a story I loved as a child told me a lot about myself as an adult. I hope children reading this book will love The Seven Ravens as much as I did when I first came across it. Perhaps some of them will be inspired years from now to retell it yet again to their own children.  —LGB

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