oyceter: teruterubouzu default icon (Calvin and Hobbes comics)
I think this is a retold fairy tale anthology for children published before Swan Sister.

Anyhow, I felt this one was stronger overall, although I may just be unduly influenced by Jane Yolen's take on Cinderella, which rocks. Also, it made me laugh a lot, which is always extremely welcome.

There were two stories which I couldn't quite make heads or tails of; I think they were going for artistic, but my baffled and sleepy brain didn't really get it. Several perfectly serviceable stories, as in most anthologies, including one about the goose girl's horse Falada, which I wish had been brilliant. "The Goose Girl" was always one of my favorites. I don't know why. Maybe the image of a beheaded talking horse really appealed to something in me.

I still like Neil Gaiman's poem "Instructions," though I've already read it once or twice already in other collections (I think one of them was another Datlow/Windling one). I was also rather fond of Kathe Koja's "Becoming Charise," which would be of interest for just being a retelling of "The Ugly Duckling," not the most retold fairy tale. I also like how Koja wove it in with a story of not being like the others and that it was ok. And I'm putting Patricia A. McKillip's "The Twelve Dancing Princesses" in my "fond of" category. It was McKillip, but not quite as beautiful or dreamy as she can be, and while the story was wonderful and comforting, it wasn't necessarily brilliant.

My very favorites were Kelly Link's "Swans," which is a great, great retelling of "The Seven Swans" in the voice of a young girl. I adore the way Link has her narrator sound like a child, so that brothers turning into swans has about the same weight as digressions into her brother playing the saxophone. Great voice. Love. And Jane Yolen's "Cinder Elephant" was wonderful and worth the entire book. It's about a not-so-skinny Cinderella, and Yolen doesn't preach or anything. She's just enormously delightful, and I love how she plays with words in the story. It also has extremely idiotic birds, which pleases me.

ETA: fixed tag
oyceter: teruterubouzu default icon (Calvin and Hobbes comics)
Anyone familiar with Datlow and Windling's anthologies of retold fairy tales for adults (starting with Snow White, Blood Red) will be familiar with the general type of story in this anthology. However, since it's the second of their anthologies for children (it seems to be marketed to a younger age group than YA), there's definitely not nearly as much as the blood and horror and sexuality in their anthologies for adults.

I got this because I am a completist and because I love fairy tales. I was fairly entertained by the anthology but not particularly blown away by any of the stories. My favorites all seemed to be ones that took fairy tale imagery and translated them to modern psychological concerns, much as Buffy does with horror. While I generally don't like modern day fairy tale analogues, my two favorite stories in the collection were both retellings set in the present day.

The first was Lois Metzger's "The Girl in the Attic," a retelling of Rapunzel that rewrites the figure of the wicked stepmother and the tower into something about motherhood and the expectations that parents have of their children and vice versa. It was a little story, but I liked it. I also liked the title story, Katherine Vaz's "My Swan Sister," which has the image of what happens to the final swan brother at its core. It's another small story on loss and the inability to stem loss, and never having enough time.

The others I was rather fond of were Neil Gaiman's poem on Arabian Nights, which reminded me of [livejournal.com profile] rilina's short story, something about the importance of story, of the act of storytelling and its importance, Tanith Lee's take on Sleeping Beauty, in which the sleeping princess actually has a hundred years to explore the world.

The rest of the stories sometimes felt a little too stretched for the fairy tale parallels, and they just didn't sit right with me. Ah well. It also may be because I've read so many retellings, or so it feels. Anyhow, I still think one of the best retold fairy tale short stories are in Emma Donoghue's Kissing the Witch.

ETA: fixed tag

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