More rave reviews for The Ladies of Seven Brothers by Riina Katajavuori

KatajavuoriNewsletterSept12014Riina Katajavuori’s The Ladies of Seven Brothers (Wenla Männistö, Tammi 2014) continues to draw rave reviews from critics, many of whom are calling it one of the year’s best Finnish novels. Reviews are also pouring in from Finland’s active literary blogger community.

Several adaptations of The Ladies of Seven Brothers, including a stage version, are in the works.

Inspired by Finland’s most famous literary work, Aleksis Kivi’s Seven Brothers (1870), The Ladies of Seven Brothers is a satirical and spirited depiction of youth, motherhood, and of growing up in modern-day Helsinki.

Recent praise for The Ladies of Seven Brothers:

“Reading this book was a mind-blowing experience. Everything in it was so magnificent and so successfully executed that I think I read the entire book with a silly smile of infatuation on my face…there’s a lot I would like to say about this book, but I can’t find words big enough. This is perfect.”
Kirjojen keskellä (“Surrounded by Books”) literature blog, Finland

“Katajavuori’s book has been called ‘a delicious update on a classic’ – and it truly is. The Ladies of Seven Brothers is a refreshing read for both young people and adults. Whether or not one is familiar with Kivi’s famous Jukola brothers doesn’t really matter.”
– Kirjat kertovat
(“Books Tell”) literature blog, Finland

“An audacious and hilarious update on Seven Brothers that should also be of interest to young readers.”
Implisiittinen lukija (“The Implicit Reader”) literature blog, Finland

“[Katajavuori] has done the same thing as Kivi in his time: he used the same unrefined language that ordinary people used, and riled up the literary elite. I giggled happily inside the trap she had set for me.”
Kyyti library and literature blog, Finland

About the book:

All the guys are crazy about 17-year-old Wenla Männistö, who is whole-heartedly enjoying her youth, playing in a rock band and flirting with the seven slacker brothers next door. Her mother is the practical but enigmatic midwife Marja Männistö, who has raised Wenla on her own.

Bringing her own voice into the narrative is Alli Jukola, the deceased mother of the Jukola brothers, who contemplates the past and watches her boys while lounging on the edge of a cloud. We also hear from straight-talking washer Kajsa Rajamäki and Wenla’s best friend Ansku Seunala, who believes in angels. All the while, the seven brothers of Jukola trade bad jokes in front of the TV and cause mischief in the neighbourhood.

The Ladies of Seven Brothers is a modern-day deconstruction of Finland’s most famous literary work, Aleksis Kivi’s Seven Brothers (1870), told from a female perspective.

RIGHTS SOLD
THE LADIES OF SEVEN BROTHERS (Wenla Männistö)

Original publisher: FINLAND, Tammi

Reading materials
English sample
English synopsis
Finnish edition

Contact: info@ahlbackagency.com

About author


Riina Katajavuori

Riina Katajavuori  is known for both her poetry and her prose, which includes works for both adults and children; her poetry has been translated into more than 20 languages. She is also a frequent columnist for several Finnish magazines. Among her best-known projects is the Pentti picture book series created in collaboration with illustrator Salla Savolainen. Katajavuori’s novel Gifts (Tammi 2004) was nominated for the prestigious Runeberg prize. The Ladies of Seven Brothers (Tammi 2014) became an instant classic upon its fall 2014 publication.

Bibliography


2014, Literary Fiction

The Ladies of Seven Brothers

Riina Katajavuori


2004, Literary Fiction

Gifts

Riina Katajavuori