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    The Children's Book Review

    The Sister Who Ate Her Brothers: And Other Gruesome Tales | Book Review

    Dr. Jen HarrisonBy Dr. Jen Harrison3 Mins Read Ages 9-12 Best Kids Stories Fairy Tales Teens: Young Adults
    The Sister Who Ate Her Brothers: And Other Gruesome Tales | Book Review
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    Book Review of The Sister Who Ate Her Brothers: And Other Gruesome Tales
    The Children’s Book Review

    The Sister Who Ate Her Brothers: And Other Gruesome Tales

    The Sister Who Ate Her Brothers: And Other Gruesome Tales

    Written by Jen Campbell

    Illustrated by Adam de Souza

    Ages: 9+ | 120 Pages

    Publisher: Thames & Hudson | ISBN: 9780500652589

    What to Expect: Gothic horror, magic, queer characters, disability, and folk tales.

    Written and conceptualized in a manner similar to Angela Carter’s fairy-tale adaptations (but without the adult content), The Sister Who Ate Her Brothers is a masterful collection of gruesome, beautiful, witty, diverse stories.

    Forget about helpless princesses, heroic princes, and happily-ever-after endings. Real fairy tales – the ones that real people have been telling all over the world for centuries—the ones from before grown-ups decided to take all the exciting bits out – are much darker than the Cinderella and Snow White stories you’re used to. In these stories, sisters can turn into foxes and eat their brothers. Mermen can steal the souls of villagers and keep them trapped under the sea. Surgeons can replace their body parts, and witches can remove their heads from their bodies and send them traveling the world while everyone else sleeps. Are you brave enough to listen and learn what really goes on in the forest?

    The stories are adapted to reflect contemporary issues, sentiments, and fears (in the best tradition of fairy tales throughout time) and feature gender-, ability-, race-, and culturally diverse characters from around the world. They are refreshingly free of the usual stereotypes (beautiful princess, fearless prince, ugly old witch). Instead, they show resourceful and relatable characters facing and overcoming terrifying situations. Readers are encouraged to question the nature of fear, danger, and violence and reconsider how we traditionally define heroism, courage, and goodness. Throughout the volume, Adam de Souza’s iconic, noir-style Gothic illustrations bring each story to spooky life, creating a beautiful and thought-provoking book.

    The Sister Who Ate Her Brothers is a fantastic introduction to real fairy tales for questioning readers—but not for the faint-hearted!

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    About the Author

    Jen Campbell is a Sunday Times bestselling author and award-winning poet. She is the author of ten published books of nonfiction, poetry, short stories, and children’s books. Jen specializes in the history of fairy tales and the representation of disfigurement, giving guest lectures at universities, museums, and book festivals on this topic. Her video installation on the history of fairy tales is currently part of an exhibition at Suffolk University, Boston, MA. Jen’s YouTube channel, which has over 57,000 subscribers, includes popular vlogs on the history of fairy tales.

    Jen Campbell
    About the Illustrator

    Adam de Souza is an illustrator and comic artist based in Vancouver, Canada. His clients include Vice, Globe and Mail, and Live Magazine.

    Dr. Jen Harrison reviewed The Sister Who Ate Her Brothers: And Other Gruesome Tales. Discover more books like The Sister Who Ate Her Brothers: And Other Gruesome Tales by reading our reviews and articles tagged with Horror, Magic, Disabilities, and Folk Tales.

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    *Disclosure: Please note that this post may contain affiliate links that share some commission. Rest assured that these will not affect the cost of any products and services promoted here. Our team always provides their authentic opinion in all content published on this site.

    Adam de Souza Brothers Disabilities Folktales Horror Jen Campbell Magic Middle Grade Books Short Stories Siblings Sisters Thames & Hudson
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    Dr. Jen Harrison
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    Dr. Jen Harrison provides writing and research services as the CEO of Read.Write.Perfect. She completed her Ph.D. in Children’s and Victorian Literature at Aberystwyth University in Wales, in the UK. After a brief spell in administration, Jen then trained as a secondary school English teacher and worked for several years teaching Secondary School English, working independently as a private tutor of English, and working in nursery and primary schools. She has been an editor for the peer-reviewed journal of children’s literature, Jeunesse, and has published academic work on children’s non-fiction, YA speculative fiction, and the posthuman.

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