Archive | Aimee Harris RSS feed for this section

A Fairy Tale Retold: Spitting Gold, The Blue Fairy Book, Once Upon a Toad, and Toads and Diamonds

22 May

Spitting Gold
by Camelia Lowkis

Set in 1866 Paris and described as for fans of Sarah Waters, I couldn’t resist checking out Camelia Lowkis’s adult novel debut, Spitting Gold. The story focuses on Baroness Sylvie Devereux and her sister Charlotte Mothe. Sylvie has obtained upper class respectability with a loving husband and a comfortable home. Her sister Charlotte, however, is still struggling, living with a dying father and trying to make a living as spirit medium, something her sister had given up in her social climbing. When Charlotte, pulls her sister in for one last scheme it could destroy both their lives. The story itself was enjoyable with lots of intrigue, gothic melodrama, and some Sapphic romance, but what to me was most interesting was the the way in which Lowkis give us first one sisters perspective and then the other of what unfolded with part one and part two covering much of the same time, but from totally different unique and equally compelling view points. Perrault’s French fairytale, “The Fairies” or better known in English as, “Diamonds and Toads” is referenced several times about a “good” sister who is rewarded with wealth by a fairy and a “bad” sister punished, but in the end for the novel it is much more murky who is the “good” and who is the “bad.”

The Blue Fairy Book
by Andrew Lang

For those curious to read the story by Perrault, “Diamonds and Toads” that inspired Camelia Lowkis you can view one of the more popular adaptations from Andrew Lang’s The Blue Fairy Book which was originally released in 1889. The Blue Fairy Book was the first of 12 volumes of fairy tales from around the world, collected by Lang, an author, poet, and folklorist whose work I’ve seen many author’s look back on as inspiring their passion for reading. Other popular fairy tales it includes are “Hansel and Gretel,” “Beauty and the Beast,” “Puss in Boots,” and “Snow-White and Rose-Red.” If you enjoy The Blue Fairy Book than you will want to check out other volumes, each volume is marked by a different color of fairy, ending with in 1910, The Lilac Fairy.

Once Upon a Toad
by Heather Vogel Fredrick

Once Upon a Toad is a child friendly update of the classic tale. In this juvenile fiction adaptation of the fairy tale, Cat Starr moves in with her dad and stepsister, Olivia, while her mother is on a NASA Mission in Space. After a visit from her Great Aunt Abyssinia, toads are appearing every time she speaks while her step sister gets diamonds and flowers. The story ups the zaniness with jewel thieves after Olivia and a government agency wanting to examine Cat.

Toads and Diamonds
by Heather Tomlinson

Heather Tomlinson’s young adult adaptation, Toads and Diamonds, takes inspiration from precolonial India for her retelling of the classic story. When Diribani goes to get water for her family, she meets a goddess and given the gift of flowers and precious jewels but her stepsister Tana instead finds herself speaking snakes and toads as a reward. But this story asks which is the gift and which is the curse, rather than simply setup the “good” vs “bad” sister dichotomy of the original tale.

Written by:
Aimee Harris
Information and Digital Services Manager

Discover Dragons: I’m Afraid You’ve Got Dragons and To Shape a Dragon’s Breath

15 May

I’m Afraid You’ve Got Dragons
by Peter S. Beagle

I had previously read Beagle’s classic The Last Unicorn so couldn’t resist to see what his latest novel involving Dragons was like. I’m Afraid You’ve Got Dragons reads a bit like a fairy tale in some ways with a handsome prince and beautiful princess, but the prince struggles with bravery and the princess secretly wants to learn to read as much as find her true love. In the mix is also a lad of humble birth who along with two friends works as a dragon exterminator, despite a fascination with the creatures and secretly keeping a few as household pets. When an evil sorcerer threatens the kingdom, it will take all their collective skills to save the land. I felt the book held my interest more earlier on with its quirky depiction of a dragon infested castle and dragon market than later when it became somewhat more predictable in the climatic battle, but If you enjoyed The Last Unicorn you will also likely be charmed by this sweet coming of age tale.

To Shape a Dragon’s Breath
by Moniquill Blackgoose

We read To Shape a Dragon’s Breath as part of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Book Discussion Group in March. The group enjoyed the novel which although marketed as Young Adult (it was picked by a member who is a school librarian), still has plenty to appeal to adult fantasy fans. Blackgoose is of Native American descent and she works in issues of colonization and differing worldviews into her story about a teen girl, Anequs, attending a dragon academy. Beyond Native Americans there is also diversity in many of the other characters represented including one student who is neurodiverse. What I enjoyed was that this is done in an authentic feeling way and doesn’t read as simply tokenism and even characters we route for have their own flaws so one culture isn’t all perfect. There is a surprising twist on the typical romantasy love triangle and some Steampunk elements are included since her brother and his friends are part of a collective of inventors interested in “enginekraft.” The most unique concept though in the book was the way in which dragon fire is used to manipulate matter; it can both be used to split things apart as well as form new things depending on what the dragon’s companion, called Nampeshiweisit by Anequs’s people and Dragoneers by the Anglish, has them do.

Written by:
Aimee Harris
Information and Digital Services Manager