Showing posts with label Retelling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Retelling. Show all posts

Friday, August 18, 2023

#Review - The Witch and The Tsar by Olesya Salnikova Gilmore

Series: Standalone
Format: Hardcover, 432 pages
Release Date: September 20, 2022
Publisher: ACE
Source: Publisher
Genre: Fantasy / Historical

In this stunning historical fantasy debut, an isolated witch will risk all that she has to save her country and her people from dangerous gods and the twisted hearts of men.

In this stunning debut novel, the maligned and immortal witch of legend known as Baba Yaga will risk all to her country and her people from Tsar Ivan the Terrible—and the dangerous gods who seek to drive the twisted hearts of men.
 
As a half goddess possessing magic, Yaga is used to living on her own, her prior entanglements with mortals having led to heartbreak. She mostly keeps to her hut in the woods, where those in need of healing seek her out, even as they spread rumors about her supposed cruelty and wicked spells. But when her old friend Anastasia—now the wife of the tsar, and suffering from a mysterious illness—arrives in her forest desperate for her protection, Yaga realizes the fate of all of Russia is tied to Anastasia’s. Yaga must step out of the shadows to protect the land she loves.
 
As she travels to Moscow, Yaga witnesses a sixteenth-century Russia on the brink of chaos. Tsar Ivan—soon to become Ivan the Terrible—grows more volatile and tyrannical by the day, and Yaga believes the tsaritsa is being poisoned by an unknown enemy. But what Yaga cannot know is that Ivan is being manipulated by powers far older and more fearsome than anyone can imagine.

The Witch and The Tsar, by author Olesya Salnikova Gilmore, is the authors debut novel. The story itself takes place in 16th Century Russia from 1560 until 1581. The story weaves a rich tapestry of mythology and Russian history, reclaiming and reinventing the infamous Baba Yaga, and bringing to life a vibrant and tumultuous Russia, where old gods and new tyrants vie for power. This fierce and compelling novel draws from the timeless lore to create a heroine for the modern day, fighting to save her country and those she loves from oppression while also finding her true purpose as a goddess, a witch, a woman, and later a mother.
 
As a half-goddess possessing magic, Yaga, along with her companions Noch (meaning night) is an owl. Noch specializes in reconnaissance and intel-gathering. Dyen (meaning day) is how Yaga ends up getting around from place to place. Yaga is used to living on her own, her prior entanglements with mortals having led to heartbreak. She mostly keeps to her chicken legged hut (Little Hen) built in the woods, where those in need of healing seek her out, even as they spread rumors about her supposed cruelty and wicked spells. 
 
But when her old friend Anastasia—now the wife of the Tsar Ivan IV, and suffering from a mysterious illness—arrives in her forest desperate for her protection, Yaga realizes the fate of all of Russia is tied to Anastasia’s. Yaga must step out of the shadows to protect the land she loves. It was Anastasia who was, according to historians, was likely poisoned that ended up pushing Ivan over the edge to become Ivan the Terrible. Yaga witnesses a sixteenth century Russia on the brink of chaos and destruction of it's people and it's culture.
 
Tsar Ivan—soon to become Ivan the Terrible—grows more volatile and tyrannical by the day, and Yaga believes the tsaritsa is being poisoned by an unknown enemy. The tsar has fallen under the influence of a dark-hearted ageless sort, someone Yaga knows. And the game is afoot. But what Yaga cannot know is that Ivan is also being manipulated by powers far older and more fearsome than anyone can imagine. Yaga loves her Mother Russia and considers it her duty to defend her against enemies foreign and domestic. 
 
Ivan definitely counts among the latter with his later day idea to create an entire new country under his rule with boyars loyal to him along with his son Ivanovich who more or less stands by his father even when he is destroying town after town and killing what is said to be upwards of 60,000. You think Stalin, and Lenin were bad men? Add Ivan the Terrible to that list. Through Baba's eyes, readers discover the brutally of Ivan. Ivan's Oprichnina (the kingdom he carved out from Russian territory for his own totalitarian use), his oprichniki (the brutal soldiers who razed countless Russian villages and oppressed/murdered their inhabitants at Ivan's command)
 
The one difference that the authors makes is the introduction of Vasily Alekseyevich Adashev as a love interest. Vasily is written as a warrior, but mortal, which is a problem. It gets complicated since Yaga is allegedly the immortal daughter of a Goddess of Earth. Gilmore, who was born in Russia before coming to the US, has succeeded in making Yaga, and her companions appealing. The devastation wrought by Ivan and those driving him provide all the motive force anyone might require to do everything possible to stop it, which gives us a lot to root for.
 


1

Late May 1560

When my owl landed on my shoulder, I knew heartbreak was not far behind.

It was not that twilight tasted different, though on my tongue, the humid spring air had the bitterness of snowfall. It was that, even this deep in the Russian forest, dusk bled into the light with infuriating leisure. The clouds had smothered the last of the sun's rays in scarlet. Yet day clung on, delaying what mortals intended to find their way to my izbushka.

The log hut stood on chicken legs, not swaying or spinning or even pacing, as unnaturally still as me. I usually fidgeted with impatience, eager for my first client to appear, for my work to begin. Now, unease wrapped around my throat, silent as a viper.

My owl could only be here to deliver bad tidings. Like her namesake, night, Noch came in the company of darkness and shadows. It was then the mortals arrived with their fevers, skin infections, and stomach poisons; with the burns from the fires that spread too quickly in their cramped wooden villages. They did not approach me in the light of day, even if it was waning. Not unless they brought disaster.

Noch's bright yellow gaze fixed on me pointedly. She let out a screech loud enough to reanimate the skulls on the fence encircling my izbushka.

They are here, Ya. Her voice, in the language she spoke, reverberated through my mind, becoming words I could understand.

"Already?" I asked in Russian. Someone was coming. Someone desperate enough to risk being seen. "Who is it?"

What am I, your servant? You will see. A downy wing brushed against my cheek teasingly as Noch ascended into the air. But instead of hurling herself back into the sky, she flew into my hut through the open door, shedding several dove-gray feathers in her wake.

I picked up a feather, considering it. My owl never went inside of her own volition, valuing open sky and freedom above all. I strained my ears and waited for the first footfall. All I heard was the song of the crickets and the leaves, rippling in the breeze that had rushed toward me, insistent and oddly cold. Fluff drifted from the ancient cottonwood trees, settling onto the wooden steps of my hut like tufts of snow. And I had just cleaned them.

"Come down, Little Hen," I said to my izbushka, and she obeyed, folding the chicken legs beneath her so she looked almost like a regular house.

I tightened my hold on the broom and swept at the steps with renewed vigor. The hut jerked away, being unbelievably ticklish. The two shuttered windows, one on either side of the door, glowered at me. Their red and blue carvings brightened in indignation.

"Hold still, Little Hen," I said, and swept on. But I kept a close eye on the wood beyond the skulls.

My hut sat in a lush glade surrounded by towering, age-old trees. Overgrown pines and spruces jostled against starved yet stubbornly resilient birches. The oaks stood gravely, expansively, ready to pass on their energy to anyone who asked politely. The wispy grass had grown knee-high and tangled, the forest floor ripe with mushrooms, wild strawberries, and violet petals fallen from geraniums in bloom. Out of this chaos of living things a large man stepped out, all in black, face obscured by a wide-brimmed hat.

I stilled. "Who goes there?"

The man halted at the fence, no doubt trying to decide if the skulls there were human. "Is this the izbushka of Baba Yaga the Bony Leg?"

With my unease temporarily forgotten, my cheeks flushed with familiar indignation. Not many dared to say that name to my face. "It is the izbushka of Yaga."

Fool, I almost added. Do I look like a baba? I was not a babushka, lying on my stove in the throes of advanced age and infirmity. Nor was I a hag, a demon, or an illness. Nothing about me was ill or demonic or old, except the occasional thread of silver in my wild black hair. My father may have been mortal, but Mother had been a goddess since before the Christian god had come to Russia. Because of her immortality, my body had not aged past thirty after centuries on Earth. I sent a little prayer of thanks up to her.

The man stood motionless. His features were weathered and very plain, most covered in coarse black hair, as was the fashion. No outward ailment spelled disaster. His illness, though, could be of the internal or spiritual variety, even of a romantic one.

Either way, it was best to put him at ease, as was my practice with new clients. Those who came for succor found it in my hut. Healing filled the empty hours of my days, kept my hands occupied and my mind busy, gave me a sense of purpose. If I could live among mortals, healing and advising them, I would.

But the legend that clung to me-the legend of Baba Yaga, built on lies and ill will-prevented it.

Afraid now that he would flee, I reverted back to politeness. "The skulls are not human," I said softly. This part of me labored tirelessly to convince the mortals that I was not the Baba Yaga they had heard of, that I was no human-eater. "Animal bones ward off evil," I added. Near the skulls, thistle and juniper grew thickly to protect against demons.

His dark eyes narrowed as he drew closer. "Where is she, this Yaga?"

"I am Yaga." Who else could I be?

"Pah! A fine trick this is, woman!" he blustered. "I have traveled all the way from Moscow to see the vedma, and I will not be trifled with."

I had not flinched at the word witch. I had made my peace with it long ago. But I shuddered at the man's mention of the capital. Though I had never been there, I knew Moscow was at least a day's ride on horseback. Whoever came from there did so when their prayers had gone unanswered, when the mortal healers had thrown up their hands. They came in the depths of their despair. But this man was not despairing. Quite the opposite.

"By all accounts," he went on, "Baba Yaga is practically at death's door, she is so old. Deformed, too, with an iron nose and a bony leg, fangs for teeth, barely any hair. Yet here you stand, young enough to be my daughter, claiming to be the crone herself!"

My cheeks burned. It had not occurred to this thick-headed muzhik, this idiot of a man, that what he had heard was nothing more than a rumor. One that was viciously invented and flung out into the world to reduce any unmarried, reclusive woman to a hag or a witch.

"You go too far, sir," I said in a hard voice, forgetting the fear and any attempt at politeness. "You who are in such need that you seek me out in broad daylight only to ridicule me. Well, good riddance." I gripped the broom and spun on my heel toward my hut, about to tell her to stand and take me with her.

"Wait," said the man. Desperation had crept into his tone. "If I am indeed speaking to the one whom I seek, then I meant no offense-"

"Even so, you had best be on your way-" I couldn't help turning to look at him. Now he was despairing; his face had paled beneath his beard.

"Please-" He raised a hand as if to physically pull me back. "Do not punish my illustrious mistress for my ignorance."

My brow furrowed. "Your mistress?"

The man gave a solemn nod. He glanced toward the wood and let out a whistle that shook the very cottonwoods above us. Fluff fell in clumps onto the hut's steps.

I hardly noticed. On the well-bred white mare emerging from the trees sat a hooded figure, elegant as only a highborn woman knew how to be. My eyes caught on the rich velvet of her cream cloak; the fur trim, odd given the warm weather; the little bejeweled fingers gripping the reins. A pull on the hood revealed a headdress encrusted in bloodred rubies, then the face beneath, thin and drawn, cold as marble.

Though it had been years since we had last seen each other, I would have recognized her anywhere. It was Anastasia Romanovna Zakharyina-Yurieva-the tsaritsa and wife of Tsar Ivan IV of Russia. But what was Anastasia doing here? Nothing short of disaster could have compelled the tsaritsa to risk her reputation by seeking out a reclusive witch.

Indeed, she was a shadow of the rosy-cheeked maiden who had come to my izbushka more than a decade ago, on the cusp of greatness, days away from the bridal show that would catapult her into royalty. The viper of unease tightened around my throat. That girl was gone. Here was a wraith at death's door. This day had brought heartbreak. I could see the tsaritsa's situation was not just disastrous; it threatened her very life.

2

Leaving the guard to keep watch outside, I ushered the tsaritsa into the darkened innards of my hut. Little Hen was used to clients coming and going and usually behaved herself enough by staying low to the ground so as not to frighten anyone. I hastily lit a few stubby beeswax candles. The scent of burning honey filled the air as I turned back to my royal visitor, swallowing hard.

Her tears had dried, her dull brown eyes taking on a chillingly distant look. Where were the flecks of gold, the quick wit, the uncharacteristic warmth of someone of her social standing? Her vibrancy was gone. Her skirts rustled like dried-up leaves as she sank onto the stool I offered her with the tired, defeated air of one who wishes never to rise again.

A few wandering chickens clucked at my feet. Noch hooted from a shadowy corner. The tsaritsa probably found this-me-uncivilized, disgustingly rustic, even.

But she only said, "It has been months. The doctors do not know what it is. I do." She struggled out of her cloak. "I am dying."

The bell-sleeved, flower-patterned letnik gown dragged her down as if bloated with seawater. A little shiver darted up my spine, almost prompting me to ask the tsaritsa how many dresses she wore. For wealthy women, it was customarily a minimum of three. But it was clear it was not the dresses plaguing her.

There was sweat on her brow, a redness at her mouth and eyes, though her skin was missing the telltale blotches and swellings of pestilence. An internal imbalance was possible, but those were the hardest to heal. An illness of the mind or spirit? Stooping under the dry herbs and flowers hanging from the slanted ceiling, I crossed the room to an iron cauldron bubbling over a fire that never went out. Iron possessed mystical and protective powers.

"It has been some time since you visited me," I said slowly, brushing aside a purple lavender blossom. "Thirteen years?"

"With the wedding, I . . ."

"I have heard weddings eat into time like moths. What about after? I tended to your family for years. To be forgotten so quickly by you and your mother was quite the revelation." I bent over the cauldron and ladled out hot water into a bowl fashioned from bone. Steam billowed into my face as I flushed with resentment. Or maybe disappointment.

How would the great Earth Goddess Mokosh feel about such neglect? I thought about my beloved mother, the protector of women-of their work and destiny, the birth of their children. I glanced up at her symbol, the wooden horse's head hanging above the cauldron.

We provide succor regardless of wounded pride, she had once told me. Pride is an illusion and the path to conceit. Gods may be guilty of it, Yaga, but not you.

But our gods, the ancient ones born of the Universe, had been worshipped then. While Mokosh had not spoken of it, tales say she helped to create the Earth with Perun, the Supreme God and Lord of the Heavens, and many other gods besides. Perun forged the sky with his thunderbolts; Mokosh gave birth to the land. Her spindle spun the cloth of humanity, thread by thread, woman by woman, life to death, generation after generation. She was Moist Earth, mother of all living things and my actual mother.

Eventually, mortals began to worship the Christian god. While some believed in the old gods as well as him, I doubted the tsaritsa was of their number, living as she did in the center of the Orthodox Christian faith in Russia. Yet before her ascent to the court, she had gladly partaken of what infuriatingly limited talents I had inherited from Mokosh.

"I made you a tsaritsa," I said. "I provided your mother with the herbs and charms that got the court to take notice of a dead aristocrat's daughter. Or have you forgotten?"

The tsaritsa stared into my too-light blue eyes, at my unbraided hair and exposed browned arms. They were covered in pictures inked into my skin-of suns and moons and stars, of living things. Perhaps she assumed the nails and teeth studding the belt on my tunic were human.

To my surprise, she said, "Of course I remember." Then she swept off her stool and knelt at my feet. "Yagusynka, I do not fear death. I fear what would happen to the tsar and to my sons, especially to our heir, Tsarevich Ivanushka, if I were to die. I am desperate for your counsel." Her voice was soft, charged with emotion.

The heat left my face. It was so like her to fear not for herself but for others. Rumor had it that marriage had tamed the tsar's naturally violent ways, that his tsaritsa restrained his worst impulses. Her intelligence and faith guided him. If something were to happen to her, it would not just be her sons who suffered. It would be Russia and her people.

"I am providing you counsel, am I not?" This was said tartly but with a twinkle of good humor. I did not hold on to anger for very long. And I was remembering not Anastasia's neglect but her. Mother had been right. This was not about my pride, wounded though it may have been. This was about Russia's tsaritsa, about Anastasia herself, the girl I had known.

In the hut's only room, an oak table was wedged against the window adjacent to the brick, flat-topped pech oven where I prepared my potions and salves, performed my rituals, cooked my meals, even slept.

I beckoned the tsaritsa over to the table and bade her to hold a wire dowsing rod over a bowl of water. But when she did, it did not stir. This meant there was no illness of mind or spirit.




Wednesday, August 16, 2023

#Review - Cloak of Scarlet by Melanie Dickerson #Historical #YA #Retelling

Series: A Dericott Tale # 5
Format: Hardcover, 336 pages
Release Date: August 15, 2023
Publisher: Thomas Nelson
Source: Publisher
Genre: Young Adult / Retelling / Historical

She was an orphan of no importance . . .

He was an ordinary knight serving the baron . . .

Suddenly the kingdom depends on both of them.

Violet Lambton never imagined herself as anything but average. Adopted as a young child, she’s content with her comfortable life in her small medieval town with her faith, her books, and her baking . . . and the vivid red cloak her grandmother gifted her. Her one dream: to find a love that is pure and true. Then, her beloved grandmother is robbed by the villainous Baron Dunham. Outraged, Violet finds herself in the midst of the action and determines to put an end to the evil baron’s mis­treatment of the hardworking people.

Sir Merek, a knight in the service of Baron Dunham, has pledged his life to fighting injustice and defending the weak. But when he encounters the spirited and beautiful Violet and discovers the depths of the baron’s treachery, he realizes that serving his employer is not serving the kingdom—and so he sets out on a daring journey to go behind the baron’s back to expose his deceitfulness to the king.

But before Merek and Violet can act to bring the corruption to light, Violet is captured and brought directly to Dunham—where she shockingly discov­ers a secret that shakes her entire world . . . and the future she dreams of. Thrown together in the baron’s quarters in a race against time to save the lives of their loved ones and themselves, Violet and Merek must learn to trust each other to expose Dunham’s treachery to the king—all while suc­cumbing to their growing feelings for each other. Can the two find their happily ever after against all odds, or will the wolves amongst them drive them apart?


Cloak of Scarlet, by author Melanie Dickerson, is the 5th installment in the authors Dericott Tale series. The publisher has sold this as a medieval retelling of Little Red Riding Hood. Thus the Cloak of Scarlet title of the story. The story itself takes place in the year 1386. It features Violet Lambton and Sir Merek of Dericott, one of the brothers who was arrested and charged with murder and treason in the first installment of this series. Thankfully, they were all found innocent by King Richard or this wouldn't be a series, would it?

Violet Lambton never imagined herself as anything but average. Adopted as a young child after her mother died, she’s content with her comfortable life in her small medieval town with her faith, her books, and her baking and the vivid red cloak her grandmother gifted her. Her one dream: to find a love that is pure and true. Then, her beloved grandmother is robbed by the villainous Baron Dunham men. Outraged, Violet is unafraid and writes to King Richard, hoping the king will help release the poor folk of Burwelle and the surrounding areas from Baron Dunham's grasp. 

When Violet's letter gets her into trouble with the baron's men, Sir Merek must help her and get to the bottom of Dunham's deceits. Sir Merek, a knight in the service of Baron Dunham, has pledged his life to fighting injustice and defending the weak. But when he encounters the spirited and beautiful Violet and discovers the depths of the baron’s treachery, he realizes that serving his employer is not serving the kingdom—and so he sets out on a daring journey to go behind the baron’s back to expose his deceitfulness to the king. 

Merek believes in the Holy Writ since he and his sister and brothers nearly lost their lives because of the machinations of a evil stepmother. But before Merek and Violet can act to bring the corruption to light, Violet is captured and brought directly to Dunham—where she shockingly discov­ers a secret that shakes her entire world and the future she dreams of. Thrown together in the baron’s quarters in a race against time to save the lives of their loved ones and themselves, Violet and Merek must learn to trust each other to expose Dunham’s treachery to the king. 

Can the two find their happily ever after against all odds, or will the wolves amongst them drive them apart? This is a leisurely-paced YA with clean romance and themes of revenge and forgiveness. While this is a retelling of Little Red Riding Hood, there is no wolf. The wolf in this instance is a out of control Baron who robs his own people while living high off the hog. While his people are starving, he's holding massive dinners for guests. Whether or not you like Merek, you must understand that his being is based on things that happened to him that made him test his faith, and his faith in doing what's right. 





Monday, November 29, 2021

#Review - Bluebeard and the Outlaw by Tara Grayce #YA #Fantasy #Retelling

Series: A Villain's Ever After # 3
Format: Kindle, 188 pages
Release Date: August 27th 2021
Publisher: Sword & Cross Publishing
Source: Kindle Unlimited
Genre: YA / Retelling / Fantasy

Marriage: the ultimate heist.

Robin of the Greenwood spends her days robbing from the rich to feed the poor. With her knowledge of the fae paths, she eludes all attempts to capture her. But she and her merry band of brothers never seem to get anywhere. The more she steals, the more the evil Duke Guy "Bluebeard" taxes the villagers.

When Robin discovers that Duke Guy plans to marry yet again, she conceives a plan for a final, big score. As Guy's wife, she will have access to his wealth. The lord is notorious for killing his wives shortly after he marries them, but Robin has no plans to be dead wife number four.

The only problem is that Duke Guy is devastatingly handsome, brooding, and nothing at all what she expected. If she isn't careful, she might just find that he steals her heart before she can rob his riches.

A fantasy retelling of the Robin Hood legends and Bluebeard fairy tale. 


Bluebeard and the Outlaw, by author Tara Grayce, is one of twelve short novels in A Villain's Ever After, a collection of stand-alone stories featuring villainous twists on some of your favorite classic fairy tales. Read the series in any order for magical adventures … and fall in love with villains as you've never seen them before. Who said villains can't have happily-ever-afters?

This is a fun story filled heists and daring feats--pretty much anything you could hope for in a Robin Hood retelling and then goes one further by mixing in Bluebeard. Robin is basically an adrenaline junky seeking justice. Robin is the leader of her merry band of brothers, literally, they are her brothers, as they try to aid their village. Not only is Duke Guy levying too many taxes on the poor, but he’s also rumored to have murdered three wives. Robin comes up with the plan to end all plans and take care of Duke Guy forever. But is the Duke all he seems to be?

The only problem is that Duke Guy is devastatingly handsome, brooding, and nothing at all what she expected. If she isn't careful, she might just find that he steals her heart before she can rob his riches. Despite being a short story, this was much more entertaining that the first two installments in this series. There are a few bonus chapters at the end of the story. One of which includes a guest appearance from characters in her Midsummer Night's Bride story in the Stolen Brides series (all stand alone so you don't need to read the whole series in order to read it). 

You don't need to read it in order to read this book or the bonus chapter the characters appear in, but I think it's more fun to know their story. 





Friday, November 26, 2021

#Review - The Beast and the Enchantress by Camille Peters #Retelling #Fantasy #Mythology

Series: A Villain's Ever After # 1
Format: Kindle, 198 pages
Release Date: August 10, 2021
Publisher: Rosewood Publications
Source: Kindle Unlimited
Genre: Mythology / Fantasy / Retelling

f there’s one thing Astrid, an aspiring enchantress, has learned throughout her studies, it's that magic must only be used for good. But when an egocentric prince breaks her sister’s heart, Astrid’s only focus is revenge, and what better way to enact it than with a well-chosen curse?

A simple incantation is all it takes to transform the arrogant prince's appearance to match the state of his heart. But something goes wrong, causing the spell to affect not only the prince, but its caster as well. As the curse begins to change her appearance to reflect the state of her own vengeful heart, Astrid becomes desperate to break it at all costs, even if it means entering the castle in disguise and interacting with the prince she loathes.

To her surprise, Astrid encounters not a conceited prince, but one very different from the one she cursed. She soon finds her heart softening, but not in the way she expects—she’s losing it to the cursed prince she has vowed to hate. The closer they become, the more desperate Astrid is to free the prince, and herself, from the curse. But in so doing, she may lose the man she loves forever. For how could a prince ever love the woman who turned him into a beast?

 


The Beast and the Enchantress, by author Camille Peters, is one of twelve short novels in A Villain's Ever After, a collection of standalone stories featuring villainous twists on some of your favorite classic fairy tales. Read the series in any order for magical adventures...and fall in love with villains as you've never seen them before. Who said villains can't have happily-ever-afters? This book is the retelling of Beauty and the Beast with twists.

Astrid is an enchantress-in-training. When she's finished with her apprenticeship, she will serve the crown prince as court magician just as her mentor serves the current king. Astrid's younger sister has a crush on the prince, but when he is cruel to her Astrid sets out to get revenge. She curses Prince Gladen so that his outward appearance will reflect the state of his heart, and when he becomes hideously disfigured Astrid feels justified even though deep down she knows what she did was wrong. 

Unfortunately the curse also affects Astrid herself, and in order to figure out how to break it she has to spend time with the prince. Instead of the callous, self-absorbed monster she'd imagined him to be, she discovers a bitter young man tired of being seen only for his looks and title. The more time she spends with him, the more Astrid loses her own heart to the romantic, bookish person she's discovered lurks under the prince's quick temper. 

I had mixed feelings about Astrid. I admired her devotion to her sister and her love of magic, but her justification in what she does go Gladen goes way beyond being a really bad deal. Then again, Gladen has a bad habit of treating women like a nuisance, and even then, he didn't deserve the anger Astrid puts on him including a dangerous curse that can only be stopped if both characters offer a bit of redemption. 

In the end, this might have been a reimagining of Beauty and the Beast, but it also serves as a cautionary tale about the destructive nature of anger.





Thursday, November 18, 2021

#Review - Feather and Flame by Livia Blackburne #YA #Retelling #Historical

Series: Queen's Council # 2
Format: Hardcover, 336 pages
Release Date: February 1, 2022
Publisher: Disney Hyperion
Source: Publisher
Genre: YA / Historical / Retelling

She brought honor on the battlefield. Now comes a new kind of war... The war is over. Now a renowned hero, Mulan spends her days in her home village, training a militia of female warriors. The peace is a welcome one, and she knows it must be protected.

When Shang arrives with an invitation to the Imperial City, Mulan’s relatively peaceful life is upended once more. The aging emperor decrees that Mulan will be his heir to the throne. Such unimagined power and responsibility terrifies her, but who can say no to the Emperor?

As Mulan ascends into the halls of power, it becomes clear that not everyone is on her side. Her ministers undermine her, and the Huns sense a weakness in the throne. When hints of treachery appear even amongst those she considers friends, Mulan has no idea whom she can trust.

But the Queen’s Council helps Mulan uncover her true destiny. With renewed strength and the wisdom of those that came before her, Mulan will own her power, save her country, and prove once again that, crown or helmet, she was always meant to lead. This fierce reimagining of the girl who became a warrior blends fairy-tale lore and real history with a Disney twist.


Feather and Flame, by author Livia Blackburne, is the second installment in The Queen's Council series which alternates between several different authors. In the second novel within the sweeping YA historical fantasy series Queen's Council, Mulan takes center stage as she is named empress of a people who do not want her, forbidden from marrying the man she loves, and facing a potential coup, she must return to the battlefield to fight for her right to rule. Mulan is older, wiser, and bolder—but still true to the personality, character traits, and values that made her beloved by generations of Disney fans. 

Mulan is still considered to be Hero of China after she helped defeat the Huns and stopped the Hun leader from killing the emperor and taking over. I would say that this book sticks pretty close to the Disney version, rather than the recent Mulan movie version which was cleaned up and approved by the Chinese Communist Party before distribution. Mulan is now Commander of her own militia. A militia made up entirely of women who wanted more out of live than the mundane of every day life.

But things change when General Li Shang shows up and tells Mulan that the Emperor requests her presence in the Imperial City. Mulan’s relatively peaceful life is upended once more when the aging emperor decrees that Mulan will be his heir to the throne. Such unimagined power and responsibility terrifies her, but who can say no to the Emperor? As Mulan ascends into the halls of power, it becomes clear that not everyone is on her side. Her ministers undermine her, and the Huns sense a weakness in the throne. When hints of treachery appear even amongst those she considers friends, Mulan has no idea whom she can trust. 

The Queen's Council, a collection of badass former female warriors, helps Mulan uncover her true destiny. With renewed strength and the wisdom of those that came before her, Mulan will own her power, save her country, and prove once again that, crown or helmet, she was always meant to lead. This fierce reimagining of the girl who became a warrior blends fairy-tale lore and real history with a Disney twist. The story richly blends Chinese history, folklore, and magic to tell the next chapter of Mulan’s epic story.

There are some excellent relationships in this book. From Mulan and her grandmother via Oracle bones, as well as her parents, to Liwen her second in command who is probably the most skilled fighter in her militia, to Zhonglin who is as mysterious as they come, until she reveals who she is and why she's here now. Then of course there is Mulan and Li Shang. The two have been separated for a long time. When he comes back into her life, and then she's thrust into powerful position, he has to stand back and take it all in. Empress's are supposed to marry for political reasons and Li Shang begins to question any future they might have once had.  

When I first requested this title, the release date was November 9, 2021. After finishing this book, I learned that release date has now been pushed back to February 2022. Goodreads "claims" that the delay is due to supply chain issues. Really? You don't say! The first book in this series was Rebel Rose a retelling of Beauty and the Beast centering about Belle. The next book in the series is a retelling of Jasmine. As I mentioned, I would brush up on my Disney Mulan version before jumping into this story. Also, there's no MuShu in this story. Sorry!