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THE GOLDEN PRINCESS

A New Zealand–born author’s coming-of-age fairy tale for children features a bold heroine.

Being a princess might seem like every girl’s fantasy, but for Alice, that role comes with a price. Whether it involves being shut away from other children her age or meeting her obligations as part of the royal family, her life is often lonely and full of rules and limits. Rather than having a group of friends and playmates, Alice at first spends her days mostly with tutors and a lady-in-waiting. Luckily, she has caring parents who are able to provide her with royal luxuries and some freedom. As her small circle of friends widens, Alice discovers new things about herself, such as an ability to communicate without words and see ghosts. Her story traces her growth from an 8-year-old old girl to a top student at a university, where her magical powers help her keep up with her studies and rescue her friends from danger. The princess’s supernatural gifts set her apart as a heroine, and eventually it is not just her royal family that makes her famous, but her own ability to save the people around her from their crises. Under the auspices of Goddess Freya, the fairy who guides her, Alice is able to channel her magical abilities and learn to control her powers rather than have them control her, which enables her to grow in her independence and sense of self. Told through vignettes that serve as isolated episodes, this fairy tale is a sweetly rendered series of moments. Alice emerges as an atypical princess—brave and self sufficient—which makes this story edgier and fresher than the usual fairy tale. Young readers may especially enjoy its simple and straightforward language, which includes descriptions such as that her clothes “were feeling cold and sticky, almost as if she had wet herself.” Alice’s charming and intrepid antics are likely to please young and old alike. A whimsical novel about a young princess whose extrasensory powers help to save the people around her.




Pub Date: Feb. 11, 2014

ISBN: 978-1493137718

Page Count: 244

Publisher: Xlibris

Review Posted Online: July 21, 2014

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Immortal Medusa

An entrancing book of poetry.

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Ungar’s (English/Coll. of Saint Rose; The Origin of the Milky Way, 2007, etc.) new collection may not make her immortal, but it surely establishes her as a contemporary poet of the first rank.

This poetry collection is like a bowl of fruit and cream: it’s so delicious, and it all goes down so easily, that you forget how much nutrition is there. She’s also the rare talent who can take nearly anything and make it into poetry. Everything is ore for her refinery, and she pulls inspiration from numerous and sundry sources, from the natural world to mystical Judaism to an exercise class for the elderly to a student’s essay. (The author is a writing professor.) This last source fuels “On a Student Paper Comparing Emily Dickinson to Lady Gaga,” a poem that no one should ever have tried to write—and that Ungar turns to gold. This clever piece demonstrates the author’s slow turn from skeptical distance to full acceptance of her young author’s thesis; it concludes, “Should I google Lady Gaga? / Or just give the girl an A.” This collection is full of such unlikely experiments—all of which the author pulls off with easy grace. Two poems with “Medusa” in their titles show her admirable dexterity with symbols. The first, “Call Me Medusa,” takes the snake-haired sorceress as a metaphor for the author herself: “I was a brain, eyes and hair. / If not a beauty, are you then a monster? / Some say I was beautiful, raped, punished / for it, then beheaded in a rear-view mirror. / Even cut off, my head could still turn men / to stone.” The second, a poem that gives the collection its title, compares tiny jellyfish to the same mythic figure: “Tentacles resorb, / umbrella reverts, / medusa reattaches / to the ocean floor / and grows a new / colony of polyps / that bud into / identical medusae, / bypassing death.” Thus, Medusa is human and other, dead and deathless, beautiful and terrible and strange.

An entrancing book of poetry.

Pub Date: April 1, 2015

ISBN: 978-0-915380-93-0

Page Count: 98

Publisher: The Word Works

Review Posted Online: Aug. 24, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2015

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ONE PASSION

A flimsy narrative and excessive scatology.

In Matvejs’ novel, a performer with a traveling circus in the Australian Outback tries to keep her family together in the face of intimidating difficulties.

Rose Vitkovskis loves her life in the circus, despite all its hardships: little money, a sleazy boss pressuring her for sex, constant travel through dusty, dying mining towns, bad weather, etc. Mother of five, she also cares for her much older husband, who has dementia, though she’s in love with a married circus clown. It’s all worth it once she gets in the ring, where she performs on the Spanish web and shows off her trained animals. But when a severe storm scatters the troupe, Rose must rise to a new set of challenges. Though Rose continually refers to the wonder and magic of her profession—her “one passion,” per the title—no book could better cure the reader of a desire to run away and join the circus. Its marvels are asserted but thinly described; instead, the book devotes space to supposedly funny episodes involving a quantity and variety of excrement that readers might not believe possible. Toilets, farts, urine, vomit; feces from human, pig, parrot, horse, goose, monkey, dog; the senile old lady repeating “Piss…piss…piss” and “Chamber pot!”—it never ends. When not playing for laughs, it’s for humiliation, as when Rose is made to scrub some filthy toilets while wearing her circus costume in view of laughing local teenagers. Leaving aside bodily waste, it’s also disturbing to see Rose enjoying her sexual exploitation as she responds to her boss’ “ultimate dominance.” The disgusting elements make it more than a little difficult to buy high-flown statements about wonder and magic and how the real world is a nothing but a jail. Similarly, it’s difficult to buy into the thwarted romance between Rose and Freddy, a circus clown. “It’s the circus that protects our love, isn’t it?” she says. “Beyond this world around the big top, our love could never be.” There’s no such thing as divorce? More unbelievable yet is Rose’s fate after returning to civilization, which involves a naked wish-fulfillment fantasy about her journal being made into a movie.

A flimsy narrative and excessive scatology.

Pub Date: Feb. 7, 2012

ISBN: 978-1434911261

Page Count: 316

Publisher: Dorrance Publishing Co.

Review Posted Online: July 13, 2012

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