This year, DANCE your way to Valentine’s Day! Novels based on fairytales and folktales featuring dance.
In preceding years (you can find all the posts archived on my blog, btw–just look for February!), I have posted novels based on worldwide fairytales and folk tales, and on two “literary” fairytales (Cinderella and Rapunzel). This year, I’m featuring a whole week of novels based on fairytales and folktales involving dance. Here are the posts:
TODAY, Day One of Fairytale Fantasy Week: Entwined, by Heather Dixon–a novel based on the classic fairytale “The Twelve Dancing Princesses.”
Day Two: Midnight in Everwood, by M. A. Kuzniar–a novel based on the story behind the classic fairytale ballet, The Nutcracker.
Day Three: Valentine’s Day itself! The amazing fantasy novel Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell, by Susanna Clarke–a novel with a strong dancing subplot.
Day Four: House of Salt and Sorrows, by Erin A. Craig–another novel based on “The Twelve Dancing Princesses.”
Day Five: Dark Breaks the Dawn, by Sara B. Larson–a novel based on the fairytale ballet Swan Lake.
Day Six: Sexing the Cherry, by Jeanette Winterson–a final choice based on “The Twelve Dancing Princesses,” but be warned–it’s nothing like the others.
Day Seven: A wrap-up and a special exploration of the “dance mania” of the medieval period, plus a free download.
TODAY, a review of Entwined, by Heather Dixon
Entwined, a novel (2011) by Heather Dixon, published by Greenwillow Books (an imprint of Harper Collins) and based on the fairytale “The Twelve Dancing Princesses,” is one of a number of recent retellings of this fairytale. The novel sets the fairytale premise in a vaguely Victorian or Edwardian but definitely magical kingdom, where the recently-widowed king has to manage his twelve energetic daughters. The daughters, all named for flowers or plants, range from the eldest, Azalea, who has come of age and will be presented at the next ball so that suitors may vie for her hand, to the littlest, Lily, just a baby. The daughters live to dance, and when they discover a full year of mourning will force them to wear nothing but black and give up dancing, they are distraught. The chilly king doesn’t help matters with his rigid rules and seeming indifference to their grief–and his own. Azalea and her sisters discover a magic passageway to a pavilion where they can dance in secret, but they discover there’s a wicked price to be paid for all that dancing, and a mystery to be solved. Meanwhile, the various unsuitable suitors cause Azalea plenty of consternation, family ties are explored in a heartwarming way, and the plot ends in a battle of wits and magic.
The Twelve Dancing Princesses–the tale
First of all, as in years gone by, I should mention what I mean by “fairytale.” No fairies are necessarily involved. The term has evolved to refer to a particular magical type of folk tale that may involve fairies, princesses, and the like, but may not. (A subgenre of fantasy, involving the fae, is an entirely different matter). And sometimes, what readers have come to know as “fairytales” aren’t any such thing–not folklore, passed down anonymously through the generations and centuries, often by word of mouth, but literary creations by artists hoping to mimic the fairytale aura. I should also mention that my blog posts on this subject won’t refer to anything Disney, except in passing. The Disney take on fairytales occurs in a whole world of its own, it has its faithful fans, and I don’t intrude there.
The original tale was collected in 1815 by the Brothers Grimm, nineteenth century German folklorists who were–and remain–famous for their efforts. Present-day folklorists classify this tale as Aarne-Thompson-Uther type 306, “the worn-out shoes.” You can read the original Grimm version in translation here. Later collectors of fairytales published French, Russian, Scots, and other versions. Some of the tropes (characteristic features) of the tale include the princesses numbering as many as twelve (sometimes only one), the shoes that mysteriously wear out, the magical place of forbidden dancing, the clever suitor who discovers the secret and wins the hand of the eldest princess. More disturbing features include the idea that the princesses are trapped in the magic dancing venue until rescued, and unsuccessful suitors may come in for cruel or downright grisly treatment. Magic and/or imprisoning mirrors may be involved. Any adaptation may include some or all of these tropes, or turn them topsy-turvy.
My thoughts on this book:
It’s fun to read, pretty light-hearted. I found it a bit too cutesy, especially the magic–dare I say Disney-cute? After I read it, I discovered the author actually works as a story artist for Disney and loves working on Mary Poppins especially. So if that’s your thing, you may really love this book. (It’s not my thing, but as my old mother used to say, “Everyone to her own taste, said the old woman who kissed the cow.” Or, in high-falutin’ form, De gustibus non disputandem est.)
How to read it:
I got my copy to read on my Kindle, although as accident would have it (no way to charge the aging device), I had to read it on my iPad instead through the Kindle app. I do love physical books, but I travel extensively and can’t pack suitcases full of them, so I have become a big fan of e-reading. Buying an e-book ON a Kindle is about as fast as you can gratify yourself. I had to go to amazon.com and get it there, because my iPad is of course an Apple product, and the iPad strives mightily to get you to buy your e-books through iBooks. So I had an extra step to negotiate, but once I got to the Amazon site, I bought the book FAST using One-Click. Then, when I opened the Amazon app on the iPad, there it was. Reading it on the iPad was a nice experience, even though I missed my Kindle Paperwhite and how easy it is on the eyes.
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