Book Review | Princess of Thorns | Stacey Jay

I received this book for free from the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

Book Review | Princess of Thorns | Stacey JayPrincess of Thorns by Stacey Jay
Published by Delacorte on December 9, 2014
Genres: Fairy tales, Fantasy YA, Retelling, Young Adult
Pages: 400
Format: eARC
Source: the publisher via NetGalley
AmazonBarnes & NobleGoodreads
four-half-stars

Game of Thrones meets the Grimm’s fairy tales in this twisted, fast-paced romantic fantasy-adventure about Sleeping Beauty’s daughter, a warrior princess who must fight to reclaim her throne.

Though she looks like a mere mortal, Princess Aurora is a fairy blessed with enhanced strength, bravery, and mercy yet cursed to destroy the free will of any male who kisses her. Disguised as a boy, she enlists the help of the handsome but also cursed Prince Niklaas to fight legions of evil and free her brother from the ogre queen who stole Aurora’s throne ten years ago.

Will Aurora triumph over evil and reach her brother before it’s too late? Can Aurora and Niklaas break the curses that will otherwise forever keep them from finding their one true love?

[Read more…]

Waiting on Wednesday (51): Stray

Waiting on Wednesday

Stray by Elissa Sussman

Book cover Stray Elisa Sussman

Princess Aislynn knows all about the curse. Its magic is a part of her, like her awkward nose and thin fingers. It’s also something she can’t control. And girls who can’t control their abilities have a tendency to disappear. So for her own protection, Aislynn is sworn into the Order of Fairy Godmothers where she must spend the rest of her life chaste and devoted to serving another royal family.

Tasked with tending to the sweet, but sheltered Princess Linnea, Aislynn also finds a reluctant friend in the palace gardener, Thackery, who makes no secret of his disdain for her former life. The more time they spend together, though, the more she begins to doubt the rules she has observed so obediently. As Aislynn’s feelings threaten to undo the sacred vows she has taken, she risks not only her own life but Linnea’s as well. With the princess engaged to a devoted follower of The Path, there are some who would do anything to keep Aislynn from straying.

WUTTTT STRAY sounds fantastic. I’m always going to be stoked to read books about magic. Fantasies with magic? Doesn’t get any better. But this? A girl with magic who is sworn to serve the Order of FAIRY GODMOTHERS?! SHUT THE FRONT DOOR. But I’m also very intrigued by these forbidden feelings with the gardener. And what is The Path?? Sounds cultish and ominous, aka EXCELLENT.

STRAY comes out October 7, 2014 from Greenwilow

Stray

On the Same Page | Fairytales for Wilde Girls | Allyse Near

on the same pageFairytales for Wilde Girls by Allyse Near

On the Same Page is going international with April, friends. There are few things we enjoy more than fairy tales, so when we all saw FAIRYTALES FOR WILDE GIRLS, a debut from Aussie author Allyse Near, we all pretty much died and decided right away that we needed to read it together.

It’s hard to describe this book, really. Which is awesome. It’s magical realism and its got fairy tales and ghosts (or ARE they???), and family drama, and friendship, and romance. So lots of stuff. And it’s written beautifully. But one of the things that struck me about FAIRYTALES FOR WILDE GIRLS was the way Allyse Near’s writing was so visual. Everything about Isola Wilde and her beautifully bananas life is so vivid, so once I decided to do a Pinterest board for this month’s post, I was stoked. I spent hours looking for pins and pictures that reminded me of this book, and I could keep on looking. (I probably will.)

So without further ado, I’m going to highlight a few of my favorite pins and then you can go check out my whole board!

fairytales for wilde girlsThis poem by Edgar Allen Poe actually, for all its darkness, the source of a pretty sweet little thing in FAIRYTALES FOR WILDE GIRLS. Edgar, the boy across the street, calls Isola Annabel Lee after they meet and she learns his name is Edgar. It’s one of those intimate nicknames that comes from people sharing a joke that only they know. They were kind of understated but still kind of intense. 

Christobelle is Isola’s fourth brother-prince. (Yes, she calls all of her brother-princes “brothers” even though only three of the seven are male.) The brother-princes are, with one exception, Isola’s ghost friends (we’ll call them ghosts because I don’t know of another way to think of them that would make sense to people who haven’t read this book yet) that only she can see. They are her protectors and loved ones who are sometimes fantastical creatures–like Christobelle, the murderous mermaid, or Rosekin, the little pink pixie. The story of why Isola calls them brother-princes was pretty enchanting, even if it was a little confusing at first that she called them all “brothers.”

I tried to look for pictures of some of the main characters from FAIRYTALES FOR WILDE GIRLS, but the only person who I could do any justice at all was James, the second brother-prince, and the only one who is an actual living, breathing human being. He has a very complicated relationship with Isola. He’s kind of a surf bum who maybe, possibly wants to be more than a brother of any kind to Isola. He’s the only person who knows about Isola’s quirks–aka, the fact that she basically has imaginary friends–but he doesn’t deal with it very well. ANYWHO, getting back on track here, this is the best picture I could find of Isola. No, you can’t see her face. But I found that it was her kind of outrageously weird appearance that stuck with me, mostly because she OWNED it. I couldn’t imagine her wearing tame clothing or having just one color hair.

fairytales for wilde girlsIsola’s bedroom is the scene of so much action, and I just about died when I found this pin because there’s so much about it that reminds me of Isola’s room. First of all, it has a window. Very important. Second of all–and it’s the part that kills me the most–is the writing on the wall behind the bed. Isola describes the wall behind her bed as being so covered over with poems and quotes and words and thoughts that she’s written there over the years that it looks like grafitti. Plus the lights…it makes the room look magical and that’s an important vibe from the book.

RUSLANA. Guys, Ruslana is a Fury and is also the third brother-prince. (I’m not going to highlight them all here, though.) There are so many pins of badass female warriors that reminded me of Ruslana, but this is one of my favorites.

So basically the story of FAIRYTALES FOR WILDE GIRLS centers around Isola, a young girl who has these imaginary/ghost/friends. She lives on the outskirts of a this magical, kind of weird place called Viven’s Wood. It’s a literal wood. She traverses it daily, until one day she discovers a birdcage hanging from one of the trees with a dead girl’s corpse in it. From that moment on, the woods become less welcoming and more foreboding, and the dead girl begins to haunt Isola and her brother-princes. The culmination of this girl and the cage is pretty great, and sad, but this birdcage reminded me of the one Isola finds the girl’s body in.

Vivien’s Wood. It’s hard to tell if this place is really magical or if it’s just the way Isola sees it, but it’s as much a character in this book as the actual characters.

fairytales for wilde girlsSo there’s actually a really cool story within FAIRYTALES FOR WILDE GIRLS that involves unicorns and it’s sad and lovely and vengeful and bloody and I just loved the effing crap out of it. Seriously, the fairy tales from Isola’s book are excellent.

Fairytales for Wilde Girls All of Isola’s easy, confident weirdness comes from her near obsession with the fairy tales in this book. It was a gift to her from her mother, who is unwell and barely leaves the house. Isola’s relationship with her dad is frosty, and he ignores Isola’s mom outright. But Isola finds comfort in the wild, weird, dark fairy tales of Lileo Pardieu. This stories set the tone for Isola’s life, and for FAIRYTALES FOR WILDE GIRLS.

But these pins aren’t all, friends!! Go check out the rest of my board! And let me tell you: I’ll be hunting for pins that remind me of this book from here on out.

Follow Amy’s board Fairy Tales For Wilde Girls on Pinterest.

Don’t forget to check out Brittany and Alyssa’s posts for FAIRYTALES FOR WILDE GIRLS by Allyse Near!!

Waiting on Wednesday (33): The Glass Casket

Waiting on WednesdayThe Glass Casket by McCormick Templeman

 

Book cover by The Glass Casket by McCormick Templeman

Death hasn’t visited Rowan Rose since it took her mother when Rowan was only a little girl. But that changes one bleak morning, when five horses and their riders thunder into her village and through the forest, disappearing into the hills. Days later, the riders’ bodies are found, and though no one can say for certain what happened in their final hours, their remains prove that whatever it was must have been brutal.

Rowan’s village was once a tranquil place, but now things have changed. Something has followed the path those riders made and has come down from the hills, through the forest, and into the village. Beast or man, it has brought death to Rowan’s door once again.

Only this time, its appetite is insatiable.

So, this cover. I love it, but I can’t figure out why it looks like she’s about to make herself puke all over her nice manicure. Or like she is licking the cream cheese frosting off her fingers, which is at least understandable. But even considering the finger-in-the-mouth thing, the cover looks so atmospheric, which seems to be perfect for THE GLASS CASKET. The fantasy/paranormal/mystery vibe I get from the synopsis just rings so many of my bells.

Also, there are so many elusions to the Snow White, Rose Red fairy tale, just in the title and the cover and synopsis: the pop of red, the glass casket itself, the main character’s name being Rose–I’m incredibly intrigued by this beast and the death and the “insatiable appetite”! THE GLASS CASKET can’t come out fast enough.

THE GLASS CASKET is coming out on February 11, 2014 from Delacorte

The Glass Casket