Ursula LeGuin’s The Wife’s Story is written as an oral, first-person narrative, in which the main character – who eventually turns out to be a wolf (perhaps) - describes her beloved husband and their seemingly idyllic family life. The story takes place in the past tense, except at new moons, when the husband mysteriously disappears. One night she experiences with horror his transformation into a human. This triggers a hunt, in which the family and neighbors finally kill him. The students in visual communication have rewritten the story, illustrated and designed small books, which we have printed, folded, stapled and trimmed. In this way, they have created visual interpretations that highlight the deeper layers of the work and at the same time offer personal interpretations of LeGuin’s text. The project concluded with the students reading their books aloud to each other.