Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Spindle's End by Robin McKinley

When the queen finally has a child after years of waiting, the rulers want share their joy with everyone and allow one person from every city, town, or village, to the naming ceremony. Katriona represents the little village of Foggy Bottom. The ceremony is interrupted, however, before the twenty-first godparent can give the little princess a gift: the bad fairy Pernicia places a curse on her which will cause her to prick her finger on a spinning wheel and fall into a magical coma. Somehow Kat finds herself carrying the princess home with her. For the next 21 years, Kat and her fairy aunt raise 'Rosie' as their own, hiding her as well as 'ordinariness' can, and hoping that the curse will never come to pass.

This re-telling of Sleeping Beauty is certainly unique. The characters are all well-developed and realistic, as is the magical country where the story takes place. At the same time, this story is incredibly bogged down by McKinley's tendency to describe everything. Particularly at the start of the book, the narrative voice inserts parenthetical comments in nearly every sentence; the end of the book drags on - I almost thought that it would never quite finish. Given this, I would say that this may not be the book for you unless (1) you enjoy re-tellings and want to read them all regardless (and this is an interesting one, I'll admit), or (2) you like very descriptive, somewhat dense books.

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