Fairest by Gail Carson Levine

Fairest (hosted by Flickr.com)Synopsis: This book takes place in the fantasy world of Levine’s earlier book, Ella Enchanted. Aza is an orphan taken in by innkeepers, who raise and love her like a daughter. Her voice is the most beautiful in the land, so her parents say. Her face and figure, however, aren’t so pretty to look at. In fact, many inn visitors refuse to be served by her because of her ugliness, and so mostly Aza keeps to tasks that take her away from the guests’ sights. Her life changes when a duchess, who is the guest of the inn and has taken a liking to Aza, invites her to the royal wedding. The new queen, Ivi, is drawn to Aza, and eventually makes Aza her lady-in-waiting because Aza can iluse – that is, Aza can project her voice to sing for the queen, whose voice is mediocre. Ivi forces Aza to do this against her will, and when the court discovers the duplicity, Aza is thrown in the dungeon. She manages to escape to the caves of the gnomes, where she lives in exile almost until the end of the book.

Rating: Superbly brilliant

Opinion: As is obvious from the cover, this is based on the Snow White fairy tale. However, it is not just a retelling of the tale – it is a reworking of it that weaves the original elements of the tale into her original story so subtly that it is as if Snow White were being written for the first time. The pace of the storytelling is just right – it never drags or moves too quickly. The characters are exquisitely drawn, with surprising depth in Ivi. Prince Ijori is not quite as full of depth as Ivi and Aza, but he doesn’t seem to lack for it because the story is so focused on the two female characters. Much of the story focuses on Aza’s lack of beauty and her own comfort in her skin, which is interesting because most fairy tale characters are beautiful, or at least pretty. This book is definitely worth picking up – I loved it to the last page, and in fact stayed up to finish reading it because I couldn’t put it down. I think I might have to go buy my own copy. And all her other books, too.

Published in:  on December 3, 2006 at 9:53 pm Comments (6)
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Bone volume 1: Out from Boneville by Jeff Smith

Out from Boneville (hosted by Flickr.com)Synopsis: The Bone brothers, Fone, Phoney, and Smiley, have been kicked out of Boneville for one of Phoney’s hairbrained schemes. They get lost in the desert, separated, and all end up in a strange valley inhabited with other animals, scary rat creatures, and a red dragon (in whom nobody believes). Fone is the main character, and most of the story follows him trying to find his two cousins with the help of a tiny green bug named Ted, a girl named Thorn and her cow-racing Gran’ma Ben.

Rating: Brilliant!

Opinion: Not only are the pictures beautifully drawn, the story is humorous, engaging, and endearing. The characters each have well-rounded personalities, and you care about what happens to them, even Phoney Bone (whose only endearing characteristic is the fact that Fone Bone cares about him). There’s a lot of humor to it, too – I laughed out loud during the scene where they are running through a cloud of locusts (“Whatever you do – don’t stick out your tongue! Pitt! Poo! Yuck!”). What really keeps the story going, though, are the little mysteries – why did the Bone cousins get thrown out of Boneville? Why does the red dragon keep rescuing Fone Bone from the rat creatures, and why does no one in the valley believe that the dragon exists? What are the rat creatures, anyway? Not all of these questions are answered in this volume, which is why I can’t wait to read volume 2. This book is brilliant. Go directly to the library, do not pass go, etc. Or the bookstore if your library doesn’t have it.

Published in:  on at 8:58 pm Comments (2)
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How to be Popular by Meg Cabot

(There are plot spoilers below. Just giving you fair warning.)How to be Popular (hosted by flickr.com)

Meg Cabot is one of my favorite young adult authors, so I expected a good book when I started this one. I was a little bit disappointed, as it wasn’t quite as good as her Princess Diaries series. Mia (Princess Diaries) is a much more engaging central character than Steph (How to be Popular). I wasn’t really convinced of Steph’s reason for wanting to be popular, which is that she is tired of being a social outcast and hated by everyone except her two friends. As one of her friends points out, why would she want to be friends with people who have been so cruel to her? She does succeed in being popular for a week, but it all comes crashing down when she refuses to let the popular crowd have a big party in her grandfather’s observatory. After that, of course, everyone hates her for being a killjoy. In the end, they all end up hanging out together at a coffee house, which seems highly unlikely given that they all hated her not moments before. It is a very pat ending to an otherwise fairly realistic book about high school politics. I think the reason that the ending doesn’t work for me is that the popular characters were not as round as Steph. They were more flat, and therefore their sudden about-face seemed strange. I think that if the secondary characters had had more development, their reconciliation would have appeared more realistic.

Apart from the ending, I enjoyed the book. It was a good, light, and entertaining read. I think I’ll go reread the Princess Diaries now.

Published in:  on December 2, 2006 at 6:12 pm Comments (3)
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