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A Warning About Swans

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Swan Lake meets The Last Unicorn by way of the Brothers Grimm in a dreamy, original fairytale.
Acclaimed author R.M. Romero spins an enchanting tale in elegant verse about the search for belonging, and ultimately, empowerment. Perfect for fans of Uprooted and The Bear and the Nightingale.

"Dreamy, melancholy, and pensive. . . ."—NPR
Bavaria. 1880. Hilde was dreamed into existence by the god Odin and, along with her five sisters, granted cloaks that transform them into swans. Each sister’s cloak is imbued with a unique gift, but Hilde rejects her gift which allows her to lead the souls of dying creatures to the afterlife.
While guiding the soul of a hawk, Hilde meets the handsome Baron Maximilian von Richter, whose father left him no inheritance. Hilde is intrigued by Richter’s longing for a greater life and strikes a deal with him: She will manifest his dreams of riches, and in return, he will take her to the human world, where the song of souls can’t reach her.
But at the court of King Ludwig II in Munich, Hilde struggles to fit in. After learning that fashionable ladies are sitting for portraits, she hires non-binary Jewish artist Franz Mendelson, and is stunned when Franz renders her with swan wings. The more time she spends with Franz, the more she feels drawn to the artist’s warm, understanding nature, and the more controlling Richter becomes. When Hilde’s swan cloak suddenly goes missing, only Franz’s ability to paint the true nature of souls can help Hilde escape her newfound prison.
A Warning About Swans weaves poetry into myth with spellbinding verse. Familiar as a Grimm tale and beautiful as a fairytale, but darker and more lyrical. The perfect fantasy to cozy up with and be whisked away to real-world enchanted castles.
A BCCB Blue Ribbon Book!
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    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2023
      Hilde may look like a human girl, but she's not one--though sometimes, she is a swan. Set in our human past as well as the mystical world of spirits and gods, Hilde's story takes her from her magical and secluded woodland home into late-1800s Bavaria. Hilde and her five sisters are the daughters of the god Odin, the All-Father. Each of the young women has been endowed with a special gift as well as the ability to turn dreams into reality. Hilde's desire to distance herself from her particularly macabre skill--"The gift / of greeting / death"--sparks her desire to flee with her new friend, the human boy Baron Maximilian von Richter, leaving behind her duties in favor of human girlhood. When Richter takes Hilde to the great and bustling city of Munich and the court of melancholy King Ludwig II, she meets Franz Mendelsohn, a nonbinary Jewish teen artist. As Hilde and Franz grow close, they strive to create a successful balance between magic and reality, encountering surprising kindness and deep betrayal along the way. Written in sparse free verse, this character-driven queer narrative is an original yet slow-moving story of an otherworldly being trying to find her place in the universe. Though lyrical, the simple poetry and unembellished plot make this milquetoast historical fantasy ultimately fall flat. Main human characters are presumed White; Hilde is darker skinned and has red hair. A lukewarm historical fairy-tale fantasy. (Verse fantasy. 14-18)

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 15, 2023
      At age nine, each of the god Odin’s six daughters, whom he dreamed into existence, receives a cloak of starlight that allows them to shape-shift into swans and also bestows them with a magical gift. Hilde, the youngest, receives the ability to “coax souls from bodies,” after which she comforts and guides them into the afterlife. But her power soon becomes a burden she longs to escape, yearning to leave her forest home and live as a human. Hilde is 16 when handsome, debt-ridden Baron Maximillian von Richter invites her to his crumbling castle, and then to the Munich royal court, where she passes as human. When Jewish nonbinary artist Franz Mendelsohn, whose portraits reveal their subjects’ true spirits, paints Hilde with swan wings, though, she fears they know her secret. Still, the two grow close as Richter’s dark motives begin to emerge. Narrated by Hilde in poetic verse by Romero (The Ghosts of Rose Hill), the story smoothly melds contemporary understandings of gender equality, exploration, and representation with fairy tale–like ambiance and language, making for a gratifying read. Ages 14–up. Agent: Rena Rossner, Deborah Harris Agency.

    • Booklist

      June 1, 2023
      Grades 6-10 Hilde, the youngest of six swan-human sisters dreamed by the god Odin, lives in a forest where she ushers dying souls to the afterlife. Resentful that her destiny involves so much death (while her sisters attend to births, speed, strength, music, and languages), she flees her home and meets Richter, a young baron who becomes infatuated with Hilde and what her magic can do for him and his wealth. At first, Hilde relishes her new human existence, but gradually she realizes Richter means only to control her. Romero's reimagining of ""Tristan and Isolde"" features Franz, a nonbinary Jewish artist who falls in love with Hilde, and she with them. Set in 1880s Bavaria, this novel in verse touches on themes of true love, beauty, magic, and personal agency. ""I belong / (first and foremost, / tonight and always) / to myself. / And there is no stronger magic / than refusal,"" Hilde tells Richter in their final confrontation. Filled with romance and betrayal, enchantment and the natural world, this will appeal to fairy-tale lovers everywhere.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      December 2, 2023

      Gr 9 Up-At 16, Hilde (the youngest of Odin's "wish-maidens") leaves behind the safety and sisterhood of the "vast green wood" for the "great graying world." She meets Richter, a handsome and ambitious 18-year-old baron. A deal is struck: Richter teaches Hilde to be human; she brings his sapphire-dreams to life. As the pair journeys from Bavaria to Munich in this work set in 1880, Hilde worries that she may never belong-that is, until she meets Franz, a Jewish, nonbinary teen whose skillful portraiture reveals Hilde's true form. Richter's jealousy becomes yet another cage. Will Hilde ever truly be free? Romero blends elements of Swan Lake with German history and Norse mythology to weave a wholly original queer fairy tale. The beautifully descriptive free verse is as luxurious as Richter's jewels, though the pace may be slow for some readers. VERDICT A queer, feminist spin on familiar fairy-tale elements. Highly recommended.-Alec Chunn

      Copyright 2023 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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