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Updated: Mar 19

While doing research for my retelling of the Wild Swans I spent a lot of time reading the various “Brothers Turned Into Birds & Sister Rescues Them” tales. (There are A LOT. You would think Disney would have tapped this market by now based on all the choices, but alas, their time has not yet come.)


I found two general views that take a deeper look at what the story is about.


The first view says that stories like the Wild Swans are about sisters longing for their brothers to return from war.


In some regions of the world–and in certain eras–it was occasionally practiced that a daughter would be her father’s heir. This was done because the sons were conscripted as soldiers, or willingly left as mercenaries. Their survival rate was not the best, and it was never guaranteed that the sons would decide to come back home even if they lived. As such, it was safer for the father to pass off his business/whatever to his daughter.


Sounds pretty cool, right? Not quite.


The downside is that the daughter was the heir, but as a result her father cared a great deal about whom she married. He exerted much more control over her life, in particularly in the realm of her marriage.


Keeping that in mind, some say the bird-brother tales represent the longing sisters have for their brothers to come home and become the heirs so they are freed from marital responsibility. The only thing that keeps this analysis from being commonly believed is that no one is certain if all the bird-brother stories were collected in regions and during times that this method was practiced.


The second, more widely believed school of thought is that the Wild Swans and the Six Swans (as well as their numerous incarnates) are about family love and sacrifice.


There is a remarkable lack of jealousy among the siblings (and jealousy is something fairy tales commonly use, particularly between family members) and, in fact, the heroine’s relationship with her brothers is the only relationship that is never compromised. Her husband nearly lets her be torched and allows people to accuse her of witchcraft. (He defends her once or twice, but in the end he lets it happen.) The people in her husband’s kingdom think she’s weird and don’t try to befriend her, and her Father marries the witch that turns her brothers into swans. The heroine’s brothers are the only characters who are consistently on her side. They save her from being burned at the stake, and they defend her after they are human and can speak again.


Secondly, the heroine puts saving her brothers before everything. Talking to her husband, clearing her name, saving herself, and in some stories she even has kids (kids–more than one!) all take a back seat to freeing her brothers. Some critics use these facts to say the story is supposed to illustrate how important it is for families (or at least siblings) to stick together and help each other out in difficult times.


Another thing I found interesting is that the Bird-Brother type stories are one of the few kinds of fairy tales where the heroine actually does something.


Not to hate on Cinderella or Snow White, but the Wild Swan heroine has no help. She performs a difficult task on her own to free her brothers. It had nothing to do with romantic love and everything to do with family ties. This fact really played into my version of the story, as you can see the strong ties between Elise and her foster-brothers. It was also why I was unwilling to tie Elise to Prince Toril. Elise is one of the few–if not the only–females who saves someone, she didn’t deserve to be stuck with a husband that nearly allows her to be killed.


I find it interesting to research what fairy tales reveal about our history and culture. I hope you enjoyed this little glimpse into my research!


If this has tempted you to read my adaptation of The Wild Swans here are the links for you:

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Updated: Mar 19

Just like in my retelling of Beauty and the Beast, my book The Wild Swans is based on a fairy tale. The key difference, though, is that I pulled material and content from several similar/identical fairy tales across different countries instead of basing it off one as I did in Beauty and the Beast.


The fairy tales I used were: The Wild Swans, The Six Swans, and The Seven Ravens. I drew most heavily from The Wild Swans and The Six Swans–which are almost completely identical although the number of brothers the heroine has varies. (In the Wild Swans she has eleven. In the Six Swans she has six.)


In this blog post I'm going to dive into the differences between these different versions! If you're looking for my sarcastic summary of the core Wild Swans fairy tale go read this blog post instead.

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The Six Swans was first recorded by the Brothers Grimm, where as The Wild Swans was recorded by Hans Christian Andersen. The Six Swans is considered a German fairy tale, and The Wild Swans is Dutch.


Both stories star a princess who makes shirts out of a nasty, prickly plant to free her brothers from a curse placed on them by their wicked step mother. Both stories also involve a king from another country stumbling on the princess, falling in love with her, and taking her home. 


In both stories the princess marries the king, but the one to accuse her of witch-craft differs. In the Six Swans it is the king’s evil mother, in The Wild Swans it is an archbishop.


Finally, in both stories the climax is when the princess is almost burned at the stake but finishes the shirts in time to free her brothers just as her husband tries to free her. In both stories the youngest brother is left with a swan wing because the princess didn’t have enough time to finish the last sleeve of his shirt. After that everyone lives happily ever after in the kingdom of the Princess’s husband.


(It was to my chagrin that both stories ended there. I didn’t understand why the brothers didn’t head back home and free their country–I can’t imagine a queen who is so jealous that she turns her step-sons into birds would be a benevolent, much less just, ruler.)


The Seven Ravens follows a similar pattern (Girl finishes impossible task to break the curse on her brothers) but the big thing I took from that story was the seven brothers. Eleven brothers was going to be too many characters, but when I first tried for six brothers someone was missing. After I read The Seven Ravens I knew I had to create one more brother: Erick.


When crafting the settings and surroundings, I more closely aligned Elise’s story with The Six Swans since Arcainia’s culture is German based. Just like Elle and Severin’s Loire is French to honor the original Beauty and the Beast fairy tale, Arcainia is German to honor The Six Swans. The character names, the things they eat, even the organization of the army all have medieval German influences.



Here are the links for The Wild Swans (which is book 2 in my fairy tale series) if you're interested in reading it:

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Updated: Mar 19

The Wild Swans is not nearly well known as other fairy tales but I believe it deserves more attention as it’s one of the few fairy tales where the girl not only rescues herself, but other people (her brothers) as well!


When preparing to write my retelling of the Wild Swans I did a lot of research which I am now going to share in the format of a sarcastic summary!


There’s actually two versions of this fairy tale, the Wild Swans (by Hans Christian Anderson) and the Six Swans (by the Brothers Grimm). The stories are nearly identical, the only thing that varies is the number of brothers and some of the details of when the sister gets married. The basic story is this:

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A king with many sons and one daughter is bewitched by a wicked witch and marries her–being that his wife is dead. This wicked witch wants to rule after the king dies, so she curses the sons to take on the shape of swans–although they can briefly turn human for 15 minutes (or an hour according to some versions) every night. The witch tries to curse the daughter too, but she fails and the girl flees with her brothers to a far away land.


The sister learns (typically through a fairy queen) that if she knits stinging nettles into a shirt and makes a shirt for every brother while never speaking a single word the curse will be broken. She decides to do the task–even though her brothers assure her it is impossible–and while she spends months knitting the king of the country they are staying in finds her.


The king, naturally, falls in love with her at first sight. Being that she is mute and doesn’t fight back, the king is able to carry her off to the palace, intending to marry her. (My version of the story is going to stray from that line, though, as I am not a big fan of love at first sight.)


One day, while the king is off riding around again, the king’s mother accuses the sister of witchcraft–because she’s always knitting and she’s got these big swans that like to flock around her–and tries to have her burned at the stake. The daughter finishes the last shirt just as the villagers are lighting the wood on fire (talk about a tight deadline) and she throws the shirts on her swan brothers, turning her royally ticked off brothers back into humans. (Let’s just say they don’t take too kindly to the whole almost burning their sister thing.)


This is an illustration by Anne Anderson. She is a Scottish illustrator who died in 1930.

This is an illustration by Anne Anderson. She is a Scottish illustrator who died in 1930.


Now that she is freed from rescuing her brothers the sister is able to speak and defend herself against the claims of witch craft, which she does so just as the king returns. The king’s mother gets whacked, and the brothers and sister live happily ever after in the king’s kingdom, apparently abandoning their bewitched father.


There are several versions of this story beyond the Wild Swans and the Six Swans, but all of them follow the basic plot of the brothers getting cursed and their sister knitting shirts of stinging nettles and almost being burned at the stake. (Who accuses the sister of witch craft and why she is accused of witch craft typically varies from version to version.)


I’ve been looking forward to this story for a while because it’s one of the few fairy tales where the girl not only rescues herself, but her brothers as well. I will put my own spin on it of course, as I mentioned the plot line with the king falling in love with the mute sister is going to see some big changes because I want to use this fairy tale to illustrate the sacrifices we make for love.


As a special bonus, for my version of this story I wrote the main cast of this fairy tale to be the seven princes and the adopted princess of Arcainia–a neighboring country to the hero and heroine of Beauty and the Beast. So if you love interconnected standalone fantasy romance stories you should check out the series! Here are the links for The Wild Swans (which is book 2):

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