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Charles Scribner, Jr.

Author of The Devil's Bridge: A Legend

1+ Work 9 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Charles Scribner, Jr.

The Devil's Bridge: A Legend (1978) 9 copies, 2 reviews

Associated Works

The Garden of Eden (1946) — Preface, some editions — 2,822 copies, 32 reviews
Hansel and Gretel (1812) — Translator, some editions — 740 copies, 35 reviews
The Enduring Hemingway: An Anthology of a Lifetime in Literature (1974) — Editor, some editions — 66 copies

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Common Knowledge

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Reviews

2 reviews
When their bridge collapses during a terrible storm, the residents of a small French village are dismayed. Living in almost complete isolation, on the edge of a steep gorge, the bridge is their only contact with the outside world. When a well-dressed stranger offers to build a new bridge, in return for the soul of the first person to cross, the mayor and villagers reluctantly agree. But who will that first person be? Luckily, old Pierre the stone-mason has a few tricks up his sleeve, in this show more legend about outwitting the devil...

Legends featuring the Devil seem to be quite common in the French tradition, whether, as in The Devil's Bridge, they warn against making deals, or, like The Devil's Tail, they caution against accepting wishes. Charles Scribner's narrative, apparently based upon a number of different tales, is engaging and reads well. Evaline Ness, who won a Caldecott Medal for Sam, Bangs & Moonshine, contributes illustrations in her signature style, with black ink drawings, awash in a few repeating colors: wine-red, mustard, and a rather rosy pink.

Although The Devil's Bridge - originally published in 1978 - strikes me as being a little dated, with a different aesthetic style than is currently in vogue, I found both narrative and artwork appealing, and think that young folklore enthusiasts who are not wedded to the idea of "pretty" pictures, will feel the same. I was also struck by Scribner's afterword, in which he mentions the fact that many bridges in use in early medieval France would have been built in Roman times, their method of construction long forgotten, and therefore invested with supernatural significance. This seems like a likely explanation for the evolution of such tales, and is not so uncommon a story.

The classical Greeks, for instance, believed that the Bronze-Age Mycenaean palaces must have been built by giant Cyclopes, because they were made with such humongous stones. Hence the term, "Cyclopean architecture." As someone with a particular interest in the historical and anthropological interpretation of folklore, I find this sort of speculation about the possible antecedents of a given tale quite appealing, and I thank my friend Krista, for putting me on to this retelling!
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I enjoy stories about tricking the Devil, and illustrations by Ness, so this book was an automatic choice for me. And so, too, maybe I'm biased: but I thought it humorous, effective, and worth saving.... That is to say, if your library has a copy of this older picturebook, please check it out so it doesn't get culled for lack of circulation! Ages 4 up would love it, possibly younger if they've learned the concepts of devil and souls.

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Associated Authors

Evaline Ness Illustrator

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