book cover

Blackberry Blue

by Jamila Gavin, illustrated by Richard Collingridge

Interest age: 11+
Reading age: 11+

Published by Tamarind Books, 2014

  • Around the world
  • Myths and legends

About this book

These six new stories from Jamila Gavin are at once exotic and fresh, and traditionally heartening. The common tropes of fairy tales provide a solid structure Gavin can decorate with colourful details and rich images: sorcerers and their evil curses banish princesses and kings to dangerous forests and shape-shifting animals seek pure hearts in brave quests. Of course, love, justice and kindness must triumph over cruel spirits and malevolent natures but the twists and turns of each story provide delicious surprises.

The title story offers a Cinderella-esque tale of a beautiful girl, protected by a thorny forest against a cruel Quee: the descriptions of her delicate ball-gowns created from the forest flowers are particularly enchanting. The terrible mission in 'The Purple Lady' does not shy away from the dark capabilities of a fairy tale world – bones and bodies must be re-assembled to break the spell. 'The Golden Carp' has a beautiful eastern sensibility: precious jade is the undoing of a greedy man and his bitter son, while a magical maiden with long sleeves captivates our hero. Labyrinthine forests separate a righteous king from his people in 'Emeka the Pathfinder' and a magical violin drives a jealous musician into a macabre dance in 'Oddboy'. The final story, 'The Night Princess' tells the story of the Moon and the angry Sun, who imprisons the Princess to a life time of darkness only for her to fall in love with an earth-bound farmer.

A stunning collection of mystical fairy tales, Blackberry Blue is packed with picturesque moments that will bewitch readers who love the colourful and otherworldly nature of fairy tales and Arabian Nights stories. Gavin’s preface acknowledges the heritage of traditional European fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Andersen, but it is its extended cultural flavouring that gives this collection its vibrant lift.

About the author

Jamila Gavin was born in Mussoorie, India, to an Indian father and an English mother. The family settled in England where Jamila completed her schooling, studied music, worked for the BBC and became a mother of two. She began writing to reflect the multicultural world in which she and her children lived.

Her first book, The Magic Orange Tree was published in 1979. Other publications include: Grandpa Chatterji (shortlisted for the Smarties Award and dramatised for Channel 4 schools TV); and The Wheel of Surya (1992 Guardian Children’s Fiction Award runner-up). Her novel for young adults, Coram Boy, was published to critical acclaim in 2000 and won the Children’s Whitbread Award. She has also published a collection of brand new fairy tales, Blackberry Blue. Jamila lives in Gloucestershire.

More books like this

Share this page Twitter Facebook LinkedIn