Tuesday, October 18, 2016
Extended Hiatus--Sort of
Apologies again for the lack of new reviews. I'm making an effort to get one up sometime this week. This is what happens when you pick a book that's not only long but has pacing issues and takes way too much time to get us invested in its protagonists (dammit, Terry Brooks, I really wanted to like you!). There are a few shorter books on my list that I'll try to get through this week. If nothing else, those reviews will start popping up over the next few weeks.
Monday, October 3, 2016
A COURT OF MIST AND FURY, Sarah J. Maas
You think Maas is going to go through the whole color
spectrum? First ACOTAR in red, then ACOMAF in blue—maybe green next time? Or
yellow? Or purple? Ooh, if she’s going with the thesis-antithesis-synthesis
model, then I’m predicting purple. Hegelian dialectic, bitches!
What the heck am I talking about? Just how A Court of Mist and Fury basically flips
so many things from A Court of Thorns and
Roses 180 degrees! Some fans of the first book will like it; others will
hate it with all the passion that only shippers can feel. My disclaimer for
this review may put off Tamlin/Feyre lovers (do they have an official name?
Tumblr, enlighten me!), but I must be honest: I liked Feyre and Tamlin in as
much that he made her happy, or at least could be romantic with her to a
nauseating degree. He brought light and love into her life—so it’s a shame
their relationship takes a bleak turn that only worsens over the course of the
book, for various reasons.
NOTICE: Tiny Hiatus
Due to sickness and other distractions, I've gotten a little behind on my reading. On top of that, New York Comic Con is coming this weekend. I'll be attending Friday through Sunday. While sitting in lines will provide ample opportunity for catch-up reading, my energy reserves for writing will be depleted. I'll post a review today, then the next two weeks from now.
If you're interested in revisiting older reviews and seeing some extra content (reblogged from other people), you can check out my Tumblr platform: keepscrollingreviews.tumblr.com. I'm still experimenting a bit with the format, so any feedback would be appreciated. Happy reading!
If you're interested in revisiting older reviews and seeing some extra content (reblogged from other people), you can check out my Tumblr platform: keepscrollingreviews.tumblr.com. I'm still experimenting a bit with the format, so any feedback would be appreciated. Happy reading!
Saturday, September 24, 2016
RED: THE TRUE STORY OF RED RIDING HOOD, Liesl Shurtliff
I’m starting to realize that I’ve read and reviewed a fair
number of fantasy books inspired by the Little Red Riding Hood story, and more
are on the way. So either this cape-wearing girl is just really popular, or my
repertoire is too narrow, and what little readership I have will soon be sick
to death of her. In my defense, two of those stories were about the same Red
Riding Hood from Once Upon A Time, just
as this Red is the same character featured in Rump: The True Story of Rumpelstiltskin. For both girls, the second
book is their true debut as protagonists, so technically I’ve only reviewed two
Red Riding Hood stories, right? (Not for long—be on the lookout for Sisters Red.)
In my further defense, I had to give Red a try after enjoying Rump
so much, even if part of that enjoyment came from my attachment to the
Rumpelstiltskin fairytale—and a certain TV show’s rendition of its titular
character. But Shurtliff’s smart and fun writing styles played no small part,
so Red deserves as much
consideration.
Monday, September 19, 2016
THE OCEAN AT THE END OF THE LANE, Neil Gaiman
Some readers may tend to steer clear of first-person
narration, especially with child narrators. In response to that, I say that
if you want to see a writer do first-person well, read Neil Gaiman’s work.
Specially The Ocean at the End of the
Lane. Part of what makes the narration effective—both in first-person and with a
kid—is that it captures the atmosphere of childhood in all its mythical, treacherous glory.
There’s also some temporal distance at play, even if it’s not always apparent.
The voice itself belongs to a middle-aged man reflecting on
a series of memories from childhood he’d lost. No, it’s not a soap opera-worthy
case of amnesia. These foggy recollections are triggered when he visits the
Hempstock farm after a funeral (never told whose funeral—there’s a lot of names
we don’t know, actually). He doesn’t even realize how much he’s forgotten
until, while staring into a duck pond that his friend Lettie Hempstock called
“the ocean,” he’s mentally brought back to his seven-year-old self.
Sunday, September 11, 2016
THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD AND EVIL: A WORLD WITHOUT PRINCES, Soman Chainani
Ah, yes, the first in what will probably be a continual string
of sequels in several fantasy series I may half-regret starting somewhere down
the road. Sequels are generally a tricky business, especially since they’re
almost always part of a trilogy, tetralogy or so on. First books have the
benefit of introducing a world and its characters while not being obligated to
explain everything. The second installment has to both expand on the setup in a
meaningful way and not be a thinly
veined rehash of its predecessor. Then again, many second installments are revered
as the best part of a series because they can dare to push the heroes to their
limits and close on a dark ending. A
World Without Princes delivers a blend of all of the above, sometimes to
its own detriment.
The story continues closely from where the first book left
off: Agatha and Sophie are back in their village, now made famous by their
fairy tale. For the few months, Sophie basks in the fame while Agatha just
wants everything to be normal again. When their fame dies down, Sophie grows restless
for attention while being overshadowed by changes in her family life—her father
is getting married to her dead mother’s best friend, who Sophie suspects her
father had an affair with even while Sophie’s mother was alive. Agatha tries to
comfort Sophie and be content with their Happily Ever After. Too bad she can’t
make herself forget Tedros, the prince she started falling for back at the
School for Good and Evil. As the rising tension suggests (along with the book’s
title), events propel the girls from their village back to the school—only this
time their exit is triggered by one of them.
Monday, September 5, 2016
TRUTHWITCH, Susan Dennard
Water. Earth. Fire. Air. Aether. Void—wait, what?
Sorry, guys, this isn’t exactly a
Harry-Potter-meets-Avatar-the-Last-Airbender kind of world. But it’s not that
far off. Truthwitch is the first in a
series that takes place in a fantasy world called the Witchlands, where people
can be born with a witchery (no, not Witcher), or a special power connected to
some element of the world or human nature. Sounds like a gripping world, right?
Almost like the setting for a tabletop or video game RPG. Much like an RPG
resembling D&D or Skyrim, this is a complex world ruled by several
kingdoms, with hundreds of years of politics influencing the characters as they
pursue their own goals. The only problem: Dennard doesn’t tell us much about
it.
Sunday, August 28, 2016
THE SPARROW SISTERS, Ellen Herrick
Fair warning: The
Sparrow Sisters isn’t really a fantasy story in the expected sense. In
fact, you could argue it’s not fantasy at all because we’re never sure if magic
is present. Just about all the characters dismiss the notion that there’s magic
at work. I wouldn’t even feel comfortable putting this novel in the magical
realism category. And yet there’s
enough uncertainty and peculiarity to be outside the usual bounds of the “real
world” that I decided this book deserved to be discussed on my blog. Plus, it’s
my blog and I can break my own rules, so there.
An argument can be made that there are moments of “hyper”
reality—that is, there are incidents involving our heroines that don’t quite
fit into what most people would consider typical or ordinary. All this
ambiguity is steeped in the historical component of the story’s world. The
titular Sparrow sisters, three grown single women who live in Granite Point, a
tight-knit New England town, are descended from a Puritan-era healer who ended
up on trial as a witch. The sisters themselves claim that such an ability
derives from both natural (non-magical) talent and a thorough knowledge of
herbal remedies. But one sister stands out as especially endowed, and as expected she ends up in the center of the inevitable storm.
Monday, August 22, 2016
MAGNUS CHASE AND THE GODS OF ASGARD: THE SWORD OF SUMMER, Rick Riordan
Is it just me, or does it seem like Norse mythology got
really popular all of a sudden? Neil Gaiman’s American Gods is getting a miniseries (which in all fairness has
only a couple Norse deities, no spoilers), Marvel is making its third
Thor-centric film, and now Rick Riordan is throwing angsty teens at the mercy
of Norns, Valkyries, dwarves and giants, not to mention the gods themselves.
Now, this isn’t Riordan’s first mythology rodeo, as anyone who loves the Percy
Jackson and the Olympians series can tell you. In fact, the Greek and Norse
pantheons aren’t the only divine playgrounds he’s visited in his books. But
what of the stories themselves? Is each new hero basically Percy Jackson with a
different coat of paint? It may seem so with newcomer Magnus Chase, but the
clever reimagining of the worlds of Yggdrasil and the characters joining Magnus
in this adventure offer much to enjoy.
Sunday, August 14, 2016
UPROOTED, Naomi Novik
If you’re looking for a book that brings together the best
elements of Sarah J. Maas and Patricia Briggs in style and story, and the
intensity of the entire Lord of the Rings trilogy or the Harry Potter heptalogy,
you need look no further than Uprooted.
Does that sound overblown? Hey, if it gets you to read this book, my work here
is done.
Okay, okay, not exactly done, calm down.
Anyone planning to pick up Uprooted should have a fair idea of what to expect. When you read
its summary, you might get a Beauty-and-the-Beast vibe, what with the
arrangement between a humble village and a powerful figure called The Dragon,
who ensures the villagers’ survival in exchange for one local girl every ten
years. You wouldn’t be wrong to
notice the similarity, but it’s a bit
more complicated than that.
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Sunday, August 7, 2016
TOO MANY CURSES, A. Lee Martinez
What do you do when you throw together a kobold, a sadistic
wizard and packrat, and a castle full of enchanted creatures and objects who
just want to get back to their normal lives, and not get mauled, petrified, or
consumed by a door that must never be opened? When you put it like that, it
sounds like a Harry Potter spinoff, but even Hogwarts was never this unruly.
Instead of a boy wizard, our intrepid hero is a foxy-looking kobold named Nessy
who just wants to get through her chores without the castle falling into utter
madness, especially after her master, Margle the Horrendous, is accidentally
murdered. Such is the romp Too Many
Curses.
This fantasy screwball comedy brings out all the wildness of
its premise. But Curses isn’t exactly
a laugh-out-loud riot. Much of the humor relies on dry wit and quirky
characters, not clear-cut punch lines. It will get a chuckle out of you, but
don’t be too disappointed if you’re not rofl-ing. Now and then you can feel the
humor push a bit beyond its reach and trip over itself. Thankfully those
moments pass quickly and are easily forgiven. Maybe it’s the type of humor that
hits its mark best when someone is actually delivering it. In other words, I
really would like to see a film adaptation of this book and how comic minds
would perform these scenes. But there’s more than humor working in this book’s
favor.
Sunday, July 31, 2016
THE LEGEND OF DRIZZT: HOMELAND, R.A. Salvatore
Wow, a fantasy book that isn’t
Young Adult? It’s a little unsettling, actually, that so many entries in the
fantasy genre (and this blog) are geared to a younger audience. Perhaps not
that surprising, since literary works are considered more “adult” and
“serious”, but even sci-fi gets to explore adult themes more widely. Aside from
Game of Thrones and The Lord of the Rings, much of fantasy falls under YA or
romance. I’m hoping that novel series like Forgotten Realms will keep cropping
up and drawing in older readers in search of stories both insightful and
entertaining.
The appeal of these Dungeons and Dragons books, like its
tabletop origins, is that people across the age spectrum with a love for
fantasy can appreciate and enjoy them. That’s certainly the case with
Salvatore’s The Legend of Drizzt series, or at least his first chronological
installment, Homeland. There’s
good-old action and lore to excite the action junkie and lore nerd, but he also
teases out some social commentary about oppressive societies that use fear and
propaganda to control its population, and how suffocating it is to live in
them, unable to escape. While the world of the drow (dark elves) in
Menzoberranzan bears witness to obviously questionable morality, it can make us reflect on those aspects in our own culture an outsider might find
objectively horrifying but we accept on a daily basis.
Sunday, July 24, 2016
THE SLEEPER AND THE SPINDLE, Neil Gaiman
I almost feel as though this should be considered a Short
Review since The Sleeper and the Spindle
pretty much qualifies as a short story in length. With its illustrations, it
comes out to just under 70 pages. And honestly, it’s a concise, beautifully
rendered story that doesn’t need much said, and shouldn’t have too much said to
avoid spoilers, so forgive the brevity of this review.
As one should come to expect from Gaiman’s approach to
rehashed fairy tales, the stories of Snow White and Sleeping Beauty weave
together in both a new and familiar way, and with such seamless ease you’d
think other writers would have tried to bring them together sooner. The opening
action follows three of the seven dwarves visiting the cusp of Sleeping
Beauty’s kingdom to procure fine cloth for Snow White’s upcoming wedding. Right
away we glimpse at the devotion the dwarves have for her (if only these three—keeping
the number of dwarves low is an understandable alteration for the sake of
effective characterization) as well as understand where we are in Snow White’s
story.
Sunday, July 17, 2016
THE HOB’S BARGAIN, Patricia Briggs
As a (new) reviewer, I can occasionally—ha, yeah, occasionally—hit a brick wall when it
comes to writing on a book I’ve enjoyed. Why? A good question I don’t quite
have the answer for. It probably comes down to being reluctant to deconstruct
the weaknesses as well as the strengths of a work when you have less tangible
reasons for liking it. How does The Hob’s
Bargain stand apart from other fantasy books? How is it similar? Is the
devil in the details rather than the, let’s face it, tried and true formulas of
stories in general? Finding the answers is a large part of why I started
reviewing fantasy books.
As a fan of both Rumpelstiltskin- and Beauty and the
Beast-inspired stories, the back cover of Hob’s
Bargain promised a mix of both. Aren, our hero, is a peasant woman with the
power of foresight, though it’s a fickle power she doesn’t have much control
over. Only when the raw magic of the world is released, previously bound by
human mages, does she begin to understand her gift. But with this
self-discovery come the dangers of untamed magic resurrecting supernatural
creatures of myth, including the Hob, a powerful being who is known for its
deals. To better understand her magic and guarantee the safety of her village,
which is filled with people who distrust her now that they know about her magic,
Aren strikes a bargain with the Hob.
Sunday, July 10, 2016
TIGER LILY, Jodi Lynn Anderson
When it comes to adapting Barrie’s story of a fantastic
land where children never grow up, the aspect that just about everyone stumbles
on is the portrayal of his Native American characters, who even in the original
story suffer from the influences of colonialism and racism. Jodi Anderson
attempts to not only tackle a new vision of Neverland’s native residents but
put them in the spotlight as a culture and a collage of diverse characters.
That doesn’t spare her from some deserved criticism of the stereotypes and
caricatures she employs, as better dissected by Debbie Reese in her review of
the book. Forgive my willingness to leave the problematic elements to the
scrutiny of critics with a better grasp of the prevailing racial issues in
Western literature that Tiger Lily reflects.
I’ve honestly struggled to post this review out of fear that I wasn’t giving
the Native American portrayals their due analysis, as my own knowledge on the
subject is limited. For anyone interested, you can read Reese’s article here,
and I recommend you do. I’ll mostly stick to assessing the story elements on
the whole.
Monday, July 4, 2016
THE LOOKING GLASS WARS, Frank Beddor
Between this and Tiger
Lily, you’d think the latter would’ve given me more trouble while I worked
out how to address its flawed approach to racism and queer identity while also
praising how it brought Barrie’s characters and world to life in a new way.
Well, it came to a 50-50 split over which book gave me the splitting headache of these
last four months. Where Tiger Lily and
The Looking Glass Wars differ lies in how I can’t contribute much
social criticism to the first (as you will see next week), while I have plenty
of story-based issues with the second.
This blog reviews various works of fantasy, but my specialized
interest is in reworked popular stories that, over a century later, still enthrall
us. Sometimes I’m rewarded with works like Tiger
Lily; while it’s not free of problems, it successfully respects and
perpetuates the spirit of the original. Then we have The Looking Glass Wars. Oh, boy, do we ever. We have it so much that
it’s prompted my longest review to date. I pray for my readers’ perseverance
(if I have any readers at this point).
Let’s start with one of my biggest adaptation pet-peeves.
Friday, March 18, 2016
OUT OF THE PAST, Kalinda Vazquez & Corinna Bechko
Remember how, back in December, I was going to post a review of Once Upon A Time: Out of the Past as a follow-up to Shadow of the Queen? Yeah . . .
The long and the short of it, there’s a lot of material to cover in this book, and that’s a good thing. Out of the Past distinguishes itself from Shadow of the Queen and has learned a few important lessons. Telling four stories instead of one over the course of 88 pages demands tighter structure and perhaps simpler self-contained ideas. I think the book benefits on the whole. We get to see more characters following their own arcs, spared attempts to entwine them all into one plot that would only stretch them thin. They also each nail a personal, crucial aspect of each character’s development. Shadow of the Queen had a similar goal, but magical shenanigans distracted it from that purpose.
That said, this collection has its share of strengths and weaknesses, and they need to their fair share of consideration. Much as I tried, I couldn’t do the whole book justice in one review. So I’m breaking up Out of the Past into four “short reviews” for your reading pleasure. You can go directly to those reviews here: Dead in the Water (Captain Hook), Truth and Daggers (Rumplestiltskin & Belle), Ghosts (Evil Queen), Tea Party in March (Mad Hatter).
Short Review: DEAD IN THE WATER
Out of the Past opens with Once’s Captain Hook out at sea on the Jolly Roger. Except he’s not Captain Hook yet—this is his time as a pirate before meeting Milah, and before he lost his hand to Rumplestiltskin. The narrative setup neatly fills the 22-page length while trying to unearth some new or interesting elements of the character. Does it succeed? Eh, kind of.
The Jolly Roger is fighting through a storm to get to the Southern Isles (yes, that’s a Frozen reference), and things keep getting worse until Killian spies some calm waters, the only hope for survival. The problem is that said waters are the Leviathan Shoals, a dangerous area haunted by a monster capable of casting illusions to lure prey into its clutches. Despite the warnings of his first mate, Killian sees no alternative and orders the crew to steer the ship to the shoals. Shortly after they escape the storm, he spots a small ship nearby—and who should be on board but his deceased brother, Liam, alive and well.
Short Review: TRUTH AND DAGGERS
For me, this was the most frustrating story to read and
review, partly thanks to my bias. It centers on Belle and Rumplestiltskin, my
favorite characters on Once Upon A Time.
More than that, the story attempts to explore the pair’s relationship while
living in the Dark Castle, as well as Belle’s individual past. And it fails so much. What should’ve been a golden
nugget of canon expansion, especially for the often neglected Belle, turns out
to be fool’s gold.
The beginning has plenty of promise. We see a bit of Belle’s
daily routine as she sets out to do some grocery shopping for Rumple’s larder.
Rumple is his usual self—snarky, distrustful, and obstinate in hiding his
affection for his maid under the previous two traits. Belle engages in teasing
banter with him before setting off with a charmed broached that alerts Rumple
if she tries to run away. At this point, Belle seems to like Rumple and wants
him to trust her. Keep this in mind, as it because a somewhat baffling plot point
later.
Short Review: GHOSTS
It’s another Evil Queen story, only this time wholly focused on Regina. The art and tone, not to mention the title, evoke a haunted atmosphere that intensifies when, while traveling through the Forest of the Dead, Regina is injured in her crashed carriage and sees what she takes to be the ghost of her dead first love, Daniel. But the story doesn’t cross into the supernatural—just amazing coincidence.
The apparition is in fact a man, but not Daniel. It’s his brother William (not previously introduced in the show), and he lures Regina into a trap so as to avenge his brother’s death. As informed readers will know, Regina’s mother Cora murdered Daniel, so his death was not her fault; rather it sparked her own quest of vengeance on Snow White. To find out that a living relation of Daniel’s blames her for his demise is a surprising turn for her and the reader.
Short Review: TEA PARTY IN MARCH
The last story in Out
of the Past most strongly resembles a typical episode of Once in that it
provides crucial backstory on a beloved character, yet it’s by far the most
horrifying and would probably not be allowed to air on ABC. All right, it’s not
that graphic on the whole. I rather
wish this piece of Jefferson’s life could be adapted to the small screen, if
only to see Sebastian Stan bring back the character once more and see part of
his transformation into the Mad Hatter.
The story begins in Camelot—and doesn’t look all that
Camelot-ish. There’s no sign of King Arthur, Queen Guinevere or any of the
Knights of the Round Table. So, really, this could be set anywhere with a
vaguely period style. In fact, the clothing is closer to late 18th-century
England. Why couldn’t this have been Alice’s world instead? Wouldn’t that
have fit the story better thematically? I guess we simple readers were never meant to know these answers.
Monday, March 7, 2016
ONCE UPON A TIME: RED’S UNTOLD TALE, Wendy Toliver
Hey, what’s black, white and Red all over? It’s ABC’s latest
attempt to hold on to audience interest in their fairytale franchise—and it’s not
too shabby, if I may say so. Certainly a step up from how our beloved Red
Riding Hood was utilized in Shadow of the
Queen.
Unlike previous addends to the OUAT lore via printed media,
Toliver’s novel takes us back to an earlier period in Red’s life, filling in
bits of backstory and fleshing out her relationships with Granny, childhood hunk-friend
Peter, and other members of her village. It also has a YA flavor, but not to an
irritating degree. It follows several tropes of coming-of-age stories without
becoming too cliché. You have romantic and sexual awakening, school bullies,
weird dreams the hero doesn’t understand but have something to do with finding
her true self—yeah, that does sound more overdone when you break it down, but
Toliver’s easy, fluid yet intelligent writing style articulates the
understandable trials of entering adulthood and makes them feeling organic and
visceral to her (well, ABC’s) characters.
Tuesday, March 1, 2016
CITY OF DARK MAGIC, Magnus Flyte
First of all, let me just say that if you’re going to
use a penname, it must carry the epic and mysterious magnitude of Magnus Flyte. Goodness, he sounds like
he should be a character in this book! I hope Meg Howrey and Christina Lynch
(Flyte’s representatives) go meta at some point and write him into one of their
later works. In the words of Shia LaBeouf, just
do it.
Also courtesy of Shia LaBeouf, and one of the
important lessons of City of Dark Magic:
don’t let your dreams be dreams! Unless they involve fire, death and hell
portals, in which case, maybe, just let them remain really upsetting dreams.
But in case they’re NOT only dreams but actually prophesies, get to stopping
them as soon as possible. Kind of a complicated moral, but it makes sense once
you get to the end of the book.
Before you start the book, however, you should know
that City of Dark Magic isn’t the
same kind of fantasy book as most of the other entries I’ve read and reviewed
so far. It falls more into paranormal fiction—not even supernatural, per se, because you’re not 100% sure if what causes
the strange phenomena are based in magic, science, or simply cosmic forces not
understood. So, don’t expect the likes of Harry Potter to show up and zap the
problems away, or create them, with magic spells. The “fantasy” in this novel
is subtler. Think Da Vinci Code,
except with more alchemy, music and sex thrown in.
Tuesday, February 2, 2016
Short Review: LITTLE MAN, Michael Cunningham
First, a preamble: I swear I didn’t mean for my first “short” review for
fantasy short stories to be for a work with a synonym in the title. The concept
and the decision to do it at all was very short
notice. I put little thought into it,
but I figure that some tiny effort
should be made on my part to include short fiction in the fantasy genre in my small but growing repertoire.
Sorry, sorry. Forgive the slight digression.
THE SHORT VERSION:
Michael Cunningham is one of those contemporary literary
writers I really should be reading (I have at least one of his novels on
my shelf), but instead I’m engorging myself on fairytale-inspired fantasy books
and TV shows. So Cunningham did the only thing he could to get my attention: write
his own fairytale-inspired story.
Of course I speak in jest, but an eerie tingle went
down my spine when I saw that “Little Man” was published in the New Yorker last
summer. Oh, and he published a collection of reduxed fairy tales in A Wild
Swan and Other Tales AND a novel titled The
Snow Queen. All right, Michael, you’re on my list.
Tuesday, January 26, 2016
AMERICAN GODS, Neil Gaiman
More and more I’m becoming a fan of Neil Gaiman’s
work, but in all honesty, my first attempt to read American Gods came to a crunching halt in the first chapter. I was
in late high school at the time, so my literary palate still needed refining.
Or I just needed to develop a deeper appreciation for Norse mythology.
Whichever of these won out, I returned to and completed, with relish, this urban fantasy about ancient pantheons,
sneaky mythological symbolism, and coin tricks. So many coin tricks.
Having a broader grasp of various mythologies from
cultures around the world, especially that of the Norse religion, helped me
progress through this book without running into prolonged periods of confusion.
Some people, however, may enjoy the sheer mystery that our hero Shadow encounters on his
unexpected journey. Actually, the parallels between American Gods and The Hobbit
is not a little startling.
Monday, January 11, 2016
THE RUMPELSTILTSKIN PROBLEM, Vivian Vande Velde
Yes, I know I said my review of Out of the Past would follow Shadow of the Queen. Unfortunately the holidays, illness and some writer’s block intervened. So, instead, you’re getting another book that inflicts much less strain on my brain’s logic centers (thanks, Vasquez and Bechko). Funnily enough, the title of this short-story collection could be an alternate to that of Once Upon A Time—The Rumpelstiltskin Problem.
![]() |
| This imp doth protest! |
Anyone watching OUAT understands the Rumplestiltskin problem
all too well (one that I continue to consider the best part of the show—is my bias showing yet?). But Vande Velde is addressing something else. In her preface,
she highlights some details from the fairytale “Rumpelstiltskin” that are, let's say, fairly questionable.
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