Jack and the Seven Deadly Giants

by Sam Swope

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Description

While hoping to find his mother, Jack encounters seven deadly giants: the Giant Poet, the Terrible Glutton, Mrs. Roth, the Wild Tickler, Avaritch, Orgulla the Great, and the Green Queen.

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2 reviews
Nice enough story with some funny bits about a boy who is considered bad by adults, but leaves the village where he has been abandoned as a baby because he thinks his presence puts them in danger of giants. The moral I suppose is that boys who misbehave in the eyes of authority figures aren't really bad and may be better than the "good" people around him. The main authority figure in this case is the community's preacher and he is overly strict, intolerant, stupid, and, well, mean: he blames Jack for the giants because he has no answer to the problem. When Jack is left on someone's doorstep in the village, he is passed around from house to house because no one wants him. In spite of this, he is concerned about the welfare of the show more everyone else.

The giants are supposed to represent the seven deadly sins; sloth, avarice, gluttony, anger are obvious, but I don't know what the others are offhand and the story doesn't give me enough clues to figure them out. There is the required-in-fairy-tales old man with whom Jack shares his meager supply of food and gets a magic bean in return. SPOILER: Jack lives happily ever after, as required in fairy tales, with a beautiful woman, but it's his mother, who tucks him in bed every night after a wonderful day of adventures. Finally, someone loves him and does so unconditionally. One of the giants eats himself; like the mythological Ouroboros, Igli in Heinlein's Glory Road, and Linus Pauling's benzene-dream snake.
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All the villagers said that Jack was a bad boy, so when rumors spread of giants living in the land, they blamed Jack. Jack leaves town with a cow as his transport. Along his travels he encounters and tricks seven giants until by tricking the Green Queen, her spells die with her and the cow returns to her original form: as Jack's long-lost mother and former princess, now the Queen. The giants represent the seven deadly sins: sloth, gluttony, anger, lust, greed, pride and envy (with lust depicted as a tickle-loving giant).

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8+ Works 780 Members

Sam Swope is a LibraryThing Author, an author who lists their personal library on LibraryThing.

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Jack and the Seven Deadly Giants
Original title
Jack and the Seven Deadly Giants
Original publication date
2004
People/Characters
Jack; a cow; Sloth, the poet (a giant)
First words
Jack was just a bad boy, all the village said so.
Quotations
Jack wondered for a moment if he ought to change [and sit facing forward on the cow], then decided he'd stay put, and always ever after rode like that, the wrong way round, so he could look at all the places he had been and b... (show all)e surprised by anyplace he got.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)The proof was when his mother tucked him into bed each night, she always kissed him on the head and told him how she loved him more than ever every day.

Classifications

Genres
Kids, Fiction and Literature, Children's Books
DDC/MDS
398.2Society, government, & cultureCustoms, etiquette & folkloreFolklore & FolktalesFolk literature
LCC
PZ8 .S9797 .JLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
39
Popularity
744,935
Reviews
2
Rating
(2.79)
Languages
Dutch, English, French
Media
Paper
ISBNs
4
ASINs
1