Raven: A Trickster Tale From The Pacific Northwest | |
Author: | Gerald McDermott |
Illustrator: | Gerald McDermott |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Genre: | Picture Book |
Publisher: | Voyager Books |
Pub Date: | 1993 |
Media Type: | |
Pages: | 29 pp |
Isbn: | 978-0-15-265661-4 |
Raven: A Trickster Tale From The Pacific Northwest is a 1993 children's picture book told and illustrated by Gerald McDermott[1] using a totemic art style. Raven: A Trickster Tale From The Northwest is the tale of a shape-changing Raven using his abilities to steal the light and was a Caldecott Medal Honor Book in 1994 and a Boston Globe-Horn Book Honor Book in 1993.
The Raven arrives in a world of darkness and resolves to find the light, going on an adventure and using his smarts to take the light back with him.
The Raven came to a world covered in darkness, where men and women lived in an area of dark and cold. The Raven felt bad for the people living in the dark and resolved to search for the light. The Raven flew across mountains, rivers, and valleys until finally, he saw light. He had arrived at the house of the Sky Chief, which was shining brilliantly in the horizon. The Raven snuck into the house of the Sky Chief by turning into a pine-needle and fell into the water of the Sky Chief's beautiful daughter. The daughter drank the water and unknowingly swallowed the Raven. Time passed and she soon gave birth to a child, that bore a striking resemblance to the Raven. The Raven used his child disguise to locate and secure the Sun, stealing it from the Sky Chief and returning to the land of darkness. The Raven threw the Sun into the sky, where it stayed filling the area a bright light. People feed the Raven today as a way to say thanks for bringing light to them.
Raven:
Sky Chief's Daughter:
Sky Chief:
Publishers Weekly said, "With this masterfully executed reworking, McDermott adds to the folktale bookshelf a work in the grand tradition."[2] Horn Book Magazine stating that "The naive view suits the simplicity of the scheme, and the mythic elements of the story are masterfully rendered."[3] In a section of The New York Times Gerald McDermott is praised along with his works of fiction saying, "McDermott is not only a picture-book artist of the first-rank, but also one of our most gifted retellers of myth and folk tale."[4]