24 August 2012

Blog Tour: Anastasia Forever Blog Tour - Top Ten Things of Baba Yaga + Giveaway


Welcome to the next stop in the Anastasia Forever Blog tour for Joy Preble's Dreaming Anastasia Series. Anastasia Forever is the third book written in the series. Today Joy shares with us the Top Ten Things of Baba Yaga.


Joy Preble Links: Blog • Goodreads • Facebook • Twitter


Top Ten Things to Know About Baba Yaga the Witch
Joy Preble
Author of the DREAMING ANASTASIA series, Sourcebooks
(DREAMING ANASTASIA, 2009; HAUNTED, 2011; ANASTASIA FOREVER, 2012)

1. She is the most famous witch in Russian fairy tales/folklore. In most (maybe all) Slavic languages, ‘Baba’ means ‘old woman.’ The ‘Yaga’ is also from Slavic roots, but it’s a bit more varied in the stories of its etymology. But the easiest way to think of her name is Grandma Yaga. In the DREAMING series, I have Anastasia refer to her as Auntie Yaga, which I thought an interesting little twist. I imagined the witch as asking her captive Anastasia to call her this, perhaps as a joke, perhaps to give Anastasia the sense that the Baba Yaga is gentle, perhaps even benign, which couldn’t be farther from the truth!

2. Many authors have used her in their stories—from picture books like Babushka Baba Yaga by Patricia Polacco to genre fiction by Orson Scott Card and Neil Gaiman. There’s even a Buffy the Vampire Slayer novelization with Baba Yaga in it! She’s in movies, cartoons, anime… you name it and the old girl has appeared in it! My books are in very good company.

3. Baba Yaga lives in a hut that stands on chicken legs so that it can help her evade her enemies. (This is such a great visual that it’s been taken over in other stories too. If you’ve seen the anime film, Howl’s Moving Castle, Howl’s house also runs around on chicken legs! This is the folklore that image comes from) In some stories, including mine, pikes with the skulls of her enemies surround her house like a fence. Cool, huh? And when she travels, she rides in a huge mortar (that big black that you use to grind spices… those big black bowls they put guacamole in sometimes look like it, too!) and she stirs the air with a huge pestle. (That’s the grinding tool)

4. The idea of ‘grinding’ from that pestle in #3 connects to another fact about Baba Yaga: her forest is a place of change and transformation. Once you enter her forest, you will not come out the same… even if you survive. Baba Yaga is all about duality both in appearance and behavior. Like all strong women, she’s complex. She may use her considerable power for good. Or she may grind your bones and stick your head on her fence. She’s mercurial and powerful and she can’t quite be defined. I found this particularly fascinating in terms of women and power, which is definitely a motif that runs throughout the series. Societies tend to marginalize old women, to define them by beauty lost, to de-sexualize them. But Baba Yaga won’t stand for that and I love that about her. I thought about this a lot in building her backstory, which continues in ANASTASIA FOREVER. I wanted to know exactly how she became who she is when Anne meets her. Exactly why she agreed to protect Anastasia for the Brotherhood. And I loved the complexity of what developed from that!

5. Lots of people have written amazing articles about Baba Yaga! A good place to start if you want to read more is here: http://www.endicott-studio.com/rdrm/rrBabaYaga.html

6. Physically, Baba Yaga is very tall. She has iron teeth and a huge nose and these enormous removable hands that detach from her body to do her bidding. I use all of these physical factors in my series.

7. In many Baba Yaga tales, she has three horsemen who serve and protect her. Each rides a different color horse – one black, one red, and one white, reflecting different times of the day.

8. In most of the folktales, Baba Yaga has boundaries that she cannot cross. Although I do have her appearing in Anne’s real world, this is still a factor in the DREAMING series, both literally with a river that runs through her forest as well as metaphorically in terms of Anne. There is only so much Baba Yaga can tell Anne. The rest Anne must figure out on her own terms.

9. In her stories, she is never defeated. Ever. She always comes back!

10. And here is how I envisioned Anastasia first talking about Baba Yaga, my version of the Vasilisa story that used in DREAMING ANASTASIA:

"In the story, there was a girl. Her name was Vasilisa, and she was very beautiful. Her parents loved her. Her life was good. But things changed. Her mother died. Her father remarried. And the new wife - well, she wasn't so fond of Vasilisa. So she sent her to the hut of the fearsome witch Baba Yaga to fetch some light for their cabin. And that was supposed to be that. For no one returned from Baba Yaga's. But Vasilisa had the doll her dying mother gave her. And the doll- because this was a fairy tale and so dolls could talk - told her what to do. Helped her get that light she came for and escape. And when Vasilisa returned home, that same light burned so brightly that it killed the wicked stepmother who sent Vasilisa to that horrible place. Vasilisa remained unharmed. She married a handsome prince. And lived happily ever after.

When I listened to my mother tell the story, I would pretend I was Vasilisa the Brave. In my imagination, I heeded the advice of the doll. I outwitted the evil Baba Yaga, the fearsome witch who kept her enemies' heads on pikes outside her hut. Who rode the skies in her mortar and howled to the heavens and skittered about on bony legs. Who ate up lost little girls with her iron teeth.

But the story was not as I imagined...."




The books are available on Amazon: Dreaming Anastasia • Haunted • Anastasia Forever



To help celebrate the Anastasia Forever Blog Tour, Sourcebooks is providing all 3 book from the Dreaming Anastasia Series to one lucky reader. The giveaway is for US and CA residents only. Good Luck!!!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

34 comments:

  1. I like number 1 since I had no clue who Baba Yaga was!

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  2. Number 1, I didn't know anything about Baby Yaga. Thank you for a great giveaway.

    Jenea @ Books Live Forever

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  3. Haha I actually have a friend from Russia, so I knew the tiniest bit about Baba Yaga! I want to check this series out so badly!

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  4. I find it interesting that her house is on chicken legs. It seems like she would've picked an animal a little more terrifying to build her house with.

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  5. I'd heard most of this before being that I'm of Ukrainian descent. Number 6, the iron teeth was new to me.

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  6. I find interesting that she has three horsemen who serve and protect her.

    stephy905@hotmail.com

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  7. All of these were pretty interesting, especially #6. I thought the removable hands was a little weird. Thanks for the giveaway! :D

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  8. I like #9 an the fact that she can't be defeated. She sounds pretty awesome, and so do these books! Thanks for the giveaway. :D

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  9. This is the first time I've heard of her, so I like number 1

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  10. #7 I find the idea of having the 3 horsemen protectors(minions) to be cool making her seen pretty awesome, you know even though she's the bad guy...:D

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  11. I like #1. Thanks for the giveaway.

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  12. #6, iron teeth and detachable hands that do your bidding. AWESOME!!

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  13. WOW! What a great post!!! This is the first I've really heard of this series and I'm very intrigued :)

    I'd have to say #4 too (but I liked 'em all :) )

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  14. Number 6 I have heard of Baba Yaga I had never heard those physical descriptions before.

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  15. Christina K. in the rafflecopter

    I love how Baby Yaga is never defeated and how she has horsemen protecting her:)

    Thank you:)

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  16. Number 1 I have never heard of Baba Yaga before so it was interesting to learn about her.

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  17. #6, Her physical description. The iron teeth and those enormous removable hands that detach from her body to do her bidding is startling.

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  18. I found number 2 the most interesting. I honestly had no idea that so many other books and shows had Baba Yaga in it. Outside of this series, I've only heard of her on Syfy's Lost Girl.

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  19. I find all of them very interesting. I come froma Slavic background and this is vry interesting to me. Thanks for the info.

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  20. In her stories, she is never defeated. Ever. She always comes back!

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  21. Mine is #8. I think the fact that she has boundaries in some stories and not in others is very interesting!

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  22. I like #9 the best. Thanks for having this giveaway.
    ayancey(at)dishmail(dot)net

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  23. I think number 3 is kind of fascinating.

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  24. I like #6! Detachable hands sound like they would be great to get things done and I am curious to see how the author uses that in the books! Thanks for this amazing giveaway - I would love to win!

    Suz Reads

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  25. If you are going to make me choose. I would have to say #8.

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  26. Oooh....Baba Yaga. I'm totally having a flashback to a story I heard when I was little about this "witch". Now I'm going to have to dig around and see if I can find it. ^_^ Never heard the chicken leg aspect of her hut (how did I miss THAT odd yet intriguing detail?) and you've gotta love the two sides she has. One will placate you with cookies, the other turn you to dust. No gray for this lady. Thanks for the fascinating facts...and the chance to win!

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  27. I would have to say the chicken legs under her hut and the detachable hands......very interesting.

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  28. She is never defeated. Ever. That is my favorite one.

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  29. The chicken legs! Haha I love the visual

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