Enchantment,
by Orson Scott Card
This is Card’s take on the story of Sleeping Beauty.
He sets it in the Ukraine and America. Young Ivan first sees Katerina, the
sleeping princess, when he is a 10-year-old; wandering in his cousin,
Marek’s woods. Terrified by the atmosphere of malevolence surrounding
her, he runs away.
Years later, Ivan, the American graduate student,
returns to the Ukraine to do research for his thesis on Russian folklore
and again sees the princess, whom, over the years he had come to perceive
as a figment of his youthful imagination, still sleeping in a chasm with a
bear preventing her rescue.
When he does the obvious thing, she awakens and takes
him back to her own time. Ivan finds that the folk tales he has
studied--and the magic in them--have a basis in fact. Card’s usual
lovely clarity of writing and his characteristic humor make this an (oh,
sorry!) enchanting tale.
Jack,
the Giant Killer, by Charles de Lint
Charles de Lint writes in the genre known as Urban
Fantasy. His novels offer a mixture of gritty contemporary city life and
the joy and excitement of magic. You don’t have to read all of his books
or even read them chronologically, but it’s a lot more fun if you do.
In this tale, Jacky Rowan's boyfriend has just dumped
her. Jacky feels stale and rejected until she has a brush with magic which
enables her to see the world of Faerie which co-exists with ours. Soon she
is involved a battle between good and evil against creatures who, if they
should win, will plunge our world into nightmare along with their own.
Along the way Jacky finds love in Eilian, the handsome
son of a Laird of Dunlogan.
Spindle’s
End, by Robin McKinley
McKinley is the best of those who rework fairy tales.
Her version of Beauty and the Beast entitled – appropriately enough – Beauty
is not to be missed. Spindle’s End is equally good. In it
McKinley tells the story of Sleeping Beauty in 400-plus pages. And every
page is well worth the reading. Briar Rose is not your typical fairy tale
princess. She lives in a backwater village and wants to apprentice to a
blacksmith. She prefers breeches to gowns. When she finds that she is
indeed a princess she is appalled as she sees her freedom rapidly receding
into the distance.
This is a rich story, full of humor and wonder – not
least the world of talking animals and their societies.
Other retold tales for your reading pleasure are Deerskin,
by McKinley, Just
Ella, by Haddix, The
Nightingale, by Dalkey, and Beast,
by Napoli |