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The Glassblower's Children

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Maria Gripe’s books are treasures of international children’s literature. In The Glassblower’s Children she draws on old traditions of fairy tale and Norse myth to tell an exciting story with a very modern sensibility.

Albert the glassblower and Sophia are the loving parents of two small children, Klas and Klara. While Albert spends time in his studio, making beautiful but impractical bowls and vases that nobody wants to buy, Sophia works in the fields, collecting flax. Every year Albert goes to the fair to sell his goods, and sometimes Sophia and Klas and Klara get to go along. The children especially like to admire the dolls and toys that the family is too poor to buy. It is at the fair that Albert and Klara meet Flutter Mildweather, a wise woman who weaves rugs that tell what the future holds. And it is at the fair that the Lord of All Wishes and his Lady first set eyes on Klas and Klara. The Lord and Lady live in a castle in a fabulously luxurious but nearly deserted town, and they have everything they want, except for children of their own.

The Glassblower’s Children is filled with exceptionally vivid characters, like the one-eyed raven Wise Wit, who Flutter Mildweather thinks is “a bit superficial” now that he’s lost his “nighttime eye” and sees only the good, and the monstrous governess Nana, whose singing is enough to shatter every piece of glass in the town of All Wishes. These figures delight even as Gripe touches on serious questions, such as the search for meaningful occupation and the danger of getting everything you want except for the very things you need.

170 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1964

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About the author

Maria Gripe

60 books197 followers
Maria Gripe, born Maja Stina Walter (25 July 1923, Vaxholm, Uppland – 5 April 2007, Rönninge), was a Swedish author of books for children and young people, often written in a magical and mystical tone. In 1946 she married the artist Harald Gripe, who created cover illustrations for most of her books. His illustration career, in fact, began in connection with his wife's debut as author of I vår lilla stad ("In our little town"). Maria Gripe's first major success was Josephine (1961), the first of a series of novels that later included Hugo and Josephine and Hugo. During most of her adult life Maria Gripe lived in Nyköping, where an adaptation of her book Agnes Cecilia was filmed. After a long period of dementia Maria Gripe died at 83 in a nursing home in Rönninge outside Stockholm; her husband Harald had predeceased her by 15 years. Their daughter Camilla Gripe is also a children's author.

Much of her writing, particularly the later works, is suffused with a supernatural or mystical element. This change in her writing style from her less mature work was partly a result of the influence of Edgar Allan Poe, Charlotte and Emily Brontë, and Carl Jonas Love Almquist, and partly a reaction to violence in entertainment that had begun to gain ground in cultural expression; Gripe sought to manufacture plot tension in less overt ways. A prominent feature of Maria Gripe's writing is a respect for individuals and their unique characteristics, a trait which is especially perceptible in the social realism of the Elvis series, which she co-wrote with her husband Harald in the 1970s.

Gripe wrote 38 books, translated into 30 different languages, making her one of Sweden's most prolific writers. Her last published book is Annas blomma ("Anna's Flower", 1997). Several of Gripe's books have been filmed, such as Glasblåsarns barn (The Glassblower's Children), Agnes Cecilia: en sällsam historia ("Agnes Cecilia: a singular history") and the "Shadow" series, directed by Anders Grönros in the 1990s. Kjell Grade directed Hugo and Josephine in 1967, while Kay Pollak filmed Elvis! Elvis (Elvis and his friends) in 1976 and Flickan vid stenbänken ("The girl on the stone bench") became a television series in 1989. Dramatized versions of Tordyveln flyger i skymningen ("The dung-beetle flies at dusk"), Agnes Cecilia, Tanten ("The Aunt") and Svinhugg går igen ("The backbiter bitten") have been produced as radio serials. She also wrote the original Swedish television script for Trolltider ("Magic Time", 1979).

Stockholm University Literature professor Boel Westin praised Maria Gripe to a writer for Svenska Dagbladet, declaring that her Shadow books presented an exciting narrative that enabled readers to feel as if they were participants: "She has meant a lot. She renewed children's prose."[1]Literary researcher Ying Toijer-Nilsson, who wrote a biography Skuggornas förtrogna ("Confidant to shadows") of the author, echoed the remarks, saying that she would miss "the warm and humorous human being who was Maria Gripe." The biographer continued: "She has done a lot for the children's book world, and she got her readers to think about philosophy, about the world and about death." Toijer-Nilsson pointed out that Gripe's books also have "a significant tendency to support the social advancement of women." Her books have won many awards, including the Hans Christian Andersen Medal in 1974, and she was the 1979 Swedish winner of the Dobloug Prize for Swedish and Norwegian fiction.

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5 stars
360 (26%)
4 stars
510 (38%)
3 stars
351 (26%)
2 stars
84 (6%)
1 star
29 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 141 reviews
Profile Image for mark monday.
1,874 reviews6,304 followers
December 16, 2020
One can blow their glass and love their work, their cozy snug little life, and still live that life with a certain unawareness.

One can love their husband and children, and still feel there could be more, as they stare out the window, wondering.

One can have all the money in the world, and still have nothing that loves them. One can marry into that wealth, and have all their wishes granted, and still feel hollow. One can seek to find children to fill that hollow. One can find that the hollow remains: these children are not their own, the granted wish has not made them whole. Two may forget that sometimes wishes should not be granted.

Two may find themselves in a new world, a grand manor, their memories wiped, their world cold and lonesome and unloving. One can lash out under such circumstances.

Two may battle over children. One can aim to control and torment. One can aim to right wrongs and set free. One can win the battle, but the war remains.

One eye can make the world a rosy place, if that eye sees no shadow. Two eyes may make the world a harder place, but it is the real world, at least.

One can write a book that is like a dream and a fable, strange and forbidding, sorrowful and sweet, kind and loving. One can write a fairy tale. One can have a husband illustrate it!
Profile Image for Stella.
162 reviews15 followers
December 28, 2009
I have a very special story about this book.

Back, when I was a little kid (I think I was 10 years old) I used to arrive late to school very often. At my school, those who arrived late where always punished, either waiting in secretary or the library to the next classes to begin. That day I arrived late and the principal sent me to the library for the first time.

There was no one there, so to not bore myself out I decided to pick a book to read since I loved reading. So I saw this one, it was saying "read me, read me" and so I sat down in the floor and I started reading.

I was completely absorved by it, so absorved that when the principal came to pick me up I didn't want to go. I had to finish it! The next days I arrived late on purporse just to read the book until my parents bought it for me, haha.

It's a magical story. Special, full of love, fantasy, tenderness, innocence, and all those thing one can only find in children's literature.

I recommend this book or any written by Maria Gripe to everyone.
Profile Image for Garden Reads.
255 reviews154 followers
September 18, 2023
Leído mi adolescencia. Los hijos del vidriero, Klas y Klara son raptados por un hombre rico solo para cumplir los caprichos de su esposa. En este lugar los niños descubrirán lo dura y triste que puede ser la vida comparado con lo feliz de un hogar guiado por el amor. Aunque por supuesto no todo está perdido, la bruja Brisalinda y su peculiar cuervo llegará a ayudarlos a regresar a su hogar.

Un libro que en su momento se me hizo soso considerando que venía de leer "Las crónicas de Narnia" completa y estaba ávido de más fantasía. Así que encontré este libro en la biblioteca llevándome una ligera decepción. Aunque no es que sea un mal libro, solo que es un libro más para niños que para adolescentes. Por lo que su magia y desarrollo no están bien estructurados, la mayoría de las cosas suceden y ya, como todo libro infantil, sin detenerse a justificar demasiado las cosas más allá de las motivaciones superficiales de los personajes.

Aún así, hoy de adulto, le encuentro un valor distinto dado que abarca temas poco comunes en la literatura infantil como el trauma psicológico, la indiferencia, la tristeza, la depresión... un libro que se deja leer. Aunque se me hizo un poco depresivo lo vivido por los niños en la ciudad. El final tampoco es del todo satisfactorio, por un recurso mágico de la autora los niños olvidan practicamente todo lo sucedido.

En fin, mi yo adolescente de seguro le hubiera dado menor valoración, dado que lo terminé más porque no era de los que solía dejar una lectura a medias. Mi yo de adulto ya es otra cosa.
Profile Image for fatemeh Motamedi.
61 reviews55 followers
Read
December 7, 2021
حیف اون دو ساعتی که صرف گوش کردن داستان این کتاب کردم
سرچ کردم دیدم نوشته این کتاب مناسب ۱۳سال به بالا هست. بنظرم می‌نوشتند زیر ۱۳بهتر بود
یک ستاره هم ارزش نداره که بدم
Profile Image for La Nave Invisible.
323 reviews200 followers
Read
October 8, 2019
He venido a hablar de mi libro. Mi libro favorito.

Ya, ya estoy viendo lo que soltarán algunos (no me cuesta mucho imaginarlos, algunos me lo han dicho de verdad): ¿cómo va a ser mi libro favorito un libro de niños?

Es muy corto, las descripciones son muy infantiles y sencillas. Claro, para que lo entienda un niño. Pero los adultos apreciamos la literatura DEBERDÁ, la complicada. Qué he estado leyendo, si desde entonces no he encontrado ningún libro mejor que lo destronase como favorito.

Lo cierto es que sí que he leído muchos otros libros que me han emocionado, que me han golpeado con un giro argumental o un final especialmente bien hecho o con una trama mejor en general. Pero ninguno me ha supuesto tanto en la vida, en la conformación del carácter, en las ideas como ese libro. Así que, aunque no sea el más complejo y sesudo del mundo, es mi favorito. Sí, son motivos muy subjetivos, pero así son las opiniones.

Lo que parece menos opinión personal es que la literatura infantil está muy denostada, que parece que es fácil escribir cualquier chorrada sencillita para entretener a un niño.

A raíz de esto pregunté en Twitter si los demás compartían esta visión, y si sentían que este desprecio se agudizaba de alguna forma al tratarse de escritoras.

No muchos han percibido que esto sea más grave en autoras (aunque algunos confiesan que ni se lo habían planteado; puede que sí que pase, puede que no). De modo que el hecho de que las autoras de infantil estén tan poco visibilizadas respecto a sus colegas debe ser una suma de factores. Si alguien quiere ahondar en esto, yo le invito.

Lo que sí se nota es que se habla de este género de forma peyorativa. La literatura inferior, la simplona. Parece ser que los temas de los que trata no importan a partir de cierta edad.

Me comentaron que parte de la culpa es porque muchos creen que esos libros son solo para enseñar y, por tanto, solo contienen cosas que, a cierta edad, ya sabemos. Incluso aunque así fuera. No se puede olvidar que los libros para estas edades tempranas nos enseñan valores y cosas que vamos a retener con fuerza. Las fábulas tienen moraleja. La literatura nos entra en este periodo como una forma de aprender, además de como un pasatiempo, una evasión o una forma de abrirnos a otros mundos. Esos libros tan aparentemente fáciles de escribir son los que nos entretuvieron y enseñaron, nos introdujeron a la lectura y nos permitieron disfrutar de todas las joyas que encontramos después. Así que sí, mérito tienen.

Los que escriben literatura adulta mirando por encima del hombro harían bien en recordar que deben sus lectores a esos escritores de infantil que los iniciaron.

Continúa en... https://lanaveinvisible.com/2018/03/1...
Profile Image for Malice.
464 reviews57 followers
October 28, 2024
Es una historia para niños sobre la familia, pero con toques fantásticos y algo oscuros. Me ha gustado, por lo que la calificación sería 3.5 estrellas.
Profile Image for Rubí Santander.
426 reviews42 followers
December 18, 2022
3.5
"Desde luego, es hermoso poder ver sólo el lado luminoso de la vida, pero los que realmente están en condiciones de decir la pura verdad son aquellos que también pueden ver el lado sombrío de las cosas.
Y a decir verdad, Aleteo opinaba que Talentoso resultaba ahora un tanto superficial."
340 reviews1 follower
October 2, 2014
I remember this as pretty eeire, almost in a Gaiman-ish sense. Mysterious and fairytale-like, which is just to my liking.
Profile Image for Cheryl.
12.9k reviews483 followers
September 26, 2021
A beautiful, creative fairy-tale fantasy. I would have loved it when I was a child. Beautiful translation, too: it flows well, has little bits of wordplay, and is in the 'voice' I would expect from Gripe given her themes & adventures. And there's a sapient raven!

I'm so glad that I was reminded of this author; I loved her Hugo & Josephine trilogy when I was young. It appears that many of her books are on openlibrary.org, too!
135 reviews4 followers
July 26, 2025
A modern folktale that tackles wishes filled and unfilled.
Profile Image for Petra.
446 reviews65 followers
August 5, 2016
Jag har för mig, men kan inte komma ihåg att jag har läst någon av Maria Gripes böcker. Vilket känns lite som ett måste. Så därför blev jag väldigt glad över att få Glasblåsarns barn som recex. Och det här är vad jag tyckte;

Handlingen var småspännande, och jag gillar den lite mörka och mystiska stämningen som ligger över boken. Språket är gammaldags och världen känns väldigt charmig. Så själva känslan tycker jag att Gripe lyckas riktigt bra med. Däremot brister det i karaktärerna, och personligen har jag väldigt svårt att älska en berättelse där jag inte lär känna karaktärerna. Dock är ju detta mer av en barnbok, och deras karaktärsutveckling är inte alltid lika omfattande. Så jag får väl ha lite överseende.

Mitt slutord blir att Glasblåsarns barn var en mysig läsupplevelse, men en jag kanske hade uppskattat ännu mer i mina yngre dagar. Rekommenderas dock, om inte annat för att Maria Gripe är en sådan författare man bara bör ha läst något av.
Profile Image for Lova Berggren.
54 reviews5 followers
August 25, 2023
Asså världens mest fantastiska gotiska roman? Önska den va tre gånger så lång
301 reviews1 follower
May 3, 2024
Läste förvisso för min dotter men hade lätt läst den för egen del. Full av underliggande sensmoraler och budskap.
Profile Image for Fabulantes.
502 reviews28 followers
January 6, 2019
Reseña: https://www.fabulantes.com/2019/01/lo...
"Uno de (los) libros más bonitos (de Maria Gripe), y también uno de los pocos de su producción que tienen cabida en esta página (...), es Los hijos del vidriero (...), una bellísima novela que además es metáfora: Gripe utiliza el motivo omnipresente del cristal para poder hablar de la fragilidad de las cosas. Una fragilidad tanto material y tangible, referida a la propia corporeidad y sustancia de los objetos, como espiritual y anímica, cuando se centra en las personas. La narración reproduce la contradicción inherente al vidrio: frágil hasta el punto de poder despedazarse en múltiples aristas, y a la vez sólido y permanente, inmutable, duro. Por las páginas del libro desfilan mujeres a punto de quebrarse, como la melancólica Señora de la Ciudad de Todos los Deseos, que todo lo tiene y nada puede anhelar ya porque le es concedido, como otras incapaces de doblegarse. Y así, introducimos a Aleteo Brisalinda, una de las mejores hechiceras del medio impreso (...)".
Profile Image for J..
28 reviews1 follower
September 15, 2024
Todavía me acuerdo cuando llegué a este libro de niño. Me acompañó mi mamá a cazarlo a esos puestos de libros usados que están entre la plaza Almagro y la Iglesia de los Sacramentinos, en Santiago centro. Al abrir el libro me sorprendió el epígrafe de la primera parte: "Quien no conoce su destino, puede vivir despreocupado" -Havamal. Quedó como una marca indeleble en mí. Ahora también puse atención al epígrafe de la segunda parte: "Los ignorantes nunca saben que son muchos aquellos a quienes el éxito adormece. Un hombre es rico, otro es pobre, pero al final eso nada cuenta" -Havamal. Unos 25 años separan a ambas citas; visto desde aquí parecen dos vidas muy lejanas, extrañas la una de la otra.

Cuando lo releí reviví cierta sensación de orfandad luego de seguir los infortunios de Klas y Klara, pero al mismo tiempo rescaté algunas de las imágenes más bellas que me han dado las historias de la infancia (y la adultez), como solo una añosa mujer y hechicera podía hacerlo. Y es que Aleteo Brisalinda, y también su cuervo Talentoso, están ahí para salvarnos, para enseñarnos a salvarnos.
Profile Image for Labeba Salameh.
832 reviews268 followers
July 5, 2019
ربما تكون هذه الحكايا موجهة لليافعين
لكنها صيغت بكلمات انيقة وتركت ورلء كل صفحة لهفة وشوقا
وكأم نجحت في وصف الم مذهل
الرواية قد تكون كئيبة رغم ان النهاية ليست كذلك .. القصر وما يحويه مليئ بالرمزيات
احببتها جدا قد تكون من افضل ما قرأت هذا العام
1,527 reviews21 followers
April 3, 2022
En av de riktigt bra svenska barn-fantasy-böckerna. Den innehåller önskemagi, en halvgudomlig häxa, överföring av våld från en person till ett objekt, och platonska stilfigurer. Därutöver är den fantastiskt skriven, och ack så varm. Jag älskar den fortfarande.
213 reviews1 follower
March 31, 2014
A fey, gothic fairy tale. Both haunting and inspiring, it must have been an inspiration for CORALINE.
Profile Image for Sara Sheikhi.
236 reviews26 followers
January 13, 2024
En av berättelserna som man måste läsa likt hur man läser en saga! Väldigt många idéer, symboler och tankar ihopsatta till en bok. Det är spretigt ibland och hur det sätts ihop känns oftast rätt onaturligt. Men själva genren som det skrivs i ursäktar en del av det, man måste förstå det som en sorts saga där saker och ting är otroliga. Det långa partiet där barnen är hos kejsaren upplever jag som rörigt. Men det är ändå Gripe
Profile Image for Iryna Bozhko.
24 reviews5 followers
April 14, 2025
Це доросла книжка в дитячій обгортці.
Ледь не кожен персонаж слабує на свій душевний розлад, і лише відьмі-психотерапевтці судилося якось на це вплинути.
Дуже скандинавська історія з рідними гоголівськими мотивами: ярмарок, скрипка, нечиста сила...
Profile Image for Alaa | آلاء.
52 reviews12 followers
January 8, 2018
This is a whimsical scandinavian folklore/fairytale that was both sweet an pleasant.
Profile Image for Jani.
4 reviews
April 9, 2023
Iätön - kevyesti luettava, mutta syvällinen ajatuksia herättävä tarina.
Profile Image for Freyja.
260 reviews10 followers
January 25, 2025
Might be a little too bleak for a children's book?
Profile Image for Roadtotherisingsun.
338 reviews7 followers
November 9, 2020
Simple, poetic and incredible. One of, if not the, best fantasy books ever coming out of sweden.
It is a dark children’s tale and filled with magic.
Profile Image for Stuart.
690 reviews53 followers
September 25, 2015
The Glassblower's Children tells the tale of Albert the Glassblower, Sofia his wife, and their children Klas and Klara. Albert is a very talented man in the art of glassblowing and makes the most beautiful creations that eye has ever seen. However, what he has in talent, he lacks in salesmanship. For that reason, he and his family are very poor. His wife has to work in the fields to help make ends meet. Klara seems oblivious to being poor, and Klas seems like a very sensitive boy who gets sad whenever one of his father's glass creations breaks. Albert is unfortunately a negligent husband, because his mind seems to think of glass only, which Sofia resents.

One day the family goes to the fair so that Albert can try and sell his wares. Sofia has her fortune told first, and the lady, named Flutter Mildweather, told her that if Sofia ever needed her help, all Sofia had to do was give Flutter her ring. Albert was skeptical of Flutter and thought she was merely after the ring, so he has his fortune told next. We are not told what his fortune was, but it was enough to scare him and cause a complete change in his attitude and behavior. He spent more time with his family, and he also spent less time in his shop. The family went to another fair, and Albert's luck seemed to have turned around. He was finally selling his glass and things seemed to be changing for the family.Albert and Sofia were so busy selling glass that they lost track of the kids, and as a result the children were kidnapped. This was what Albert had been dreading the entire time.

Part Two of the book deals with what the children endure while being kidnapped and their eventual return home. Yes, I know I spoiled the ending for you, but I'm afraid some might not want to read it if they thought it would be too traumatic. The book is beautifully written, if not haunting in its words sometimes. This quote about their reflections is a perfect example. "Klas and Klara realized that the only children they would ever meet in the house were the Mirrorchildren. At first thet felt less forlorn and abandoned every time they met, as if they shared their fate with these children who said nothing, whom they could never reach and touch. But then one day surprise and joy had gone from the Mirrorchildren's faces; they saw only sorrow and anxiety, and then Klas and Klara were very much afraid." Chilling! This book is recommended for children ages 8 to 12, but I would err on the side of caution and go for older children in the tween to teen range.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 141 reviews

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