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337 pages, Hardcover
First published February 24, 2015
Setting: Sleeping Beauty's castle. Aurora wakes up to find a strange boy kissing her.
“I dub thee . . . Mouse.”
“Mouse?”
“Were you expecting something more regal?”
She shook her head and took another sip of mead. The sweet burn down her throat made her daring. “Why Mouse?”
“You look like you’re hiding away.”
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This was me after I turned the last page. Emotions = A rollercoaster.
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That's what I said, too. I hear you, Maleficent.
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Hopefully to the tragic reality that "true love" doesn't really exist in the way you're thinking...
No, Aurora thought. We would not want that. No one would want to see her as she really was, confused and exhausted and grieving for a life lost. How terribly unfestive that would be.Yep, inner monologues.
I am done struggling with this book. I only picked it up because I saw some praise for this book from my favorite Sherry Thomas, I wasn't even intrigued that this book is Sleeping beauty retelling, my only thought was: "If one of my favorite authors enjoyed this book, it must be quite interesting". So I started reading. And I felt nothing toward this book or it's characters. The language was good but it felt like everyone is still in slumber, maybe this book lacks pace, maybe I'd like more emotions from our MC Aurora, maybe it's all the pretty useless boys - this book actually doesn't have a decent male character. I understand that the author is a feminist and I am all for women's rights but everything has to have it's limits. The whole concept of true love is sacrileged in this book. The sleeping beauty was supposed to be awakened by true loves kiss, but there's no true love in this book, the princess is a cold fish, and maybe it's a child talking in me, but I believe in true love and sleeping beauty is one of my childhood fairy tales and I just can't accept what Rhiannon Thomas did to it. I just can't.