I have such weird mixed feeling about the Iassen Ghiuselev's art for this book. On the one hand, the aesthetics have a whole pre-Raphaelite lean to them in color and style and are very beautiful.
On the other hand, somewhere along the line someone made the choice to portray nearly every other person in these illustrations with their mouths gaping wide open and...(holding back laughter and tears) I know it's supposed to be singing. I really know this. But they look either like they're all shocked or like they're about swallow an entire zucchini.
Somewhere along the way an actual editor (this isn't some self-published zine, after all) looked at these gaping mouths and signed off on them. (They're singing, after all, don't you know?)
The thing is, I've seen lots of picture of actual people singing, and there's something really off about these illustrations and that thing is...none of these singers is showing their teeth. And that's what makes it look a lot more like this entire book was created with an eye toward being cut up and used for silly collages where Orpheus and the muses are chowing down on meatball subs and other less savory things.
Okay, but if you can get past the Gaped Mouth Getty Museum Collection images how does the story come out?
I don't know what the original German version of this was like but the English translation here has some occasional moments of beauty like "No one knows how huge the land of shadows is; but one day everyone will find his place there." And my personal favorite: "he sang so beautifully that Cerberus forgot to growl."
The ending feels a bit abrupt and tacked on and almost nonsensical. "And that is how singing came into the world" seems like it isn't really what the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice is all about.
Orpheus has been singing for the entire book (since being taught by Apollo and the Muses). He's been doing that singing in the world. (I mean, unless he's just been running around slack-jawed and surprised for most of the story.)
You might as well have ended the story with "And that's why people wear shoes" which given how Eurydice (snakebite on the foot) would make more sense as a lesson.
Anyhow, it was going pretty well (notwithstanding all the open mouths) until the ending so I actually do like it.