The story that I intended to eat them is a fabrication. People will make up anything I did intend to observe them closely under conditions of stress, and more blood would have been very useful to me.In the end, I would probably have let them go back home. Their father, my husband, was making my life as wretched as his own. In the end, it would have been a choice between having the children back and pretending (for a while) to be a happy-ever-after fairy-tale family, or getting rid of all three of them and moving on.from "The Prince"Suddenly I looked down. The current damsel was gloriously attired in something with pearls and ermine trim.I hardly saw her dress. My eyes fixed on her feet.Glass! I could see right through her shoes!I stopped immediately. She almost fell. I steadied her.My eyes had not left her feet as they nestled like twin birds in their delicate little cages. Such feet! Oh, Stephen, you'd have loved them too. How I longed to put them into the footbath, to pour in the perfumed oil!The music stopped. Everything stopped.
From Publishers Weekly
Cinderella's princely suitor has a foot fetish; Rumpelstiltskin deliberately lets his name be known to the hapless miller's daughter, who-unknown to her-is really Rumpelstiltskin's daughter; Snow White's stepmother, who comes from an abusive home, worked at a slaughterhouse before winning a beauty contest. Galloway broodingly revisits eight classic fairy tales, prowling about their dark corners to lay in additional helpings of pain and loss. A few of her plots are overwrought and none of them produces the frisson of The Magic Circle, Donna Jo Napoli's masterly reworking of Hansel and Gretel. And yet their subversive promise to reveal the "real" story, and even their morbidly romantic motifs of self-sacrifice, intelligently cater to adolescent tastes. Nearly operatic in their conception and accomplished in their execution, these stories could also serve as a guide to young writers: their inventive, vigorous exploration of familiar territory easily stimulates the reader's own imagination. Ages 12-up. Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From School Library Journal
Grade 7 Up?Lovers of twisted fairy tales will eat up this collection. Eight unfamiliar stories from the Grimms, Perrault, and Andersen are retold from the viewpoints of the villainous characters now recast in more sympathetic roles, or at least shown to have human frailties. In "The Name," for example, the lonely Rumplestiltskin is torn between allowing the young queen (his long-lost daughter) to know his name and wanting to raise his grandchild himself. "The Good Mother," a version of "Red Riding Hood" set in a world where humans are in danger from giant clams and carnivorous beasts, reveals the wolf's main concern to be feeding her starving pups. "The Prince" is a sullen, twisted young man with a foot fetish who is fascinated by the sight of two small feet in glass slippers. Galloway has done a masterful job of getting inside of the characters; the concept of "two sides to every story" is illustrated with some excellent examples here. The addition of unusual details, such as the sci-fi setting for "The Good Mother" or the poor-trash childhood of Snow White's stepmother in "A Taste for Beauty," underscores the uniqueness of this volume. YAs will appreciate the offbeat approach.?Mary Jo Drungil, Niles Public Library District, ILCopyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
Gr. 7^-12. Give the Rapunzel tale a Bedouin setting and mix in elements from "The Princess and the Pea." Tell "Snow White" from the wicked queen's point of view in a present-day setting and add elements of gothic horror. Show Cinderella's prince as a miserable fellow whose tyrannical father has put the kabosh on his relationship with his male tutor and commanded him to "find a mate, a female. . . . We will have a ball." Galloway does all this and more in this unusual collection of familiar folktales with startling twists. As the title hints, there is no attempt to sanitize villains or give a gentler cast to gory details. If anything, the sinister element abounds and the blood flows more freely here than in the familiar versions of these eight tales. Readers will enjoy matching the originals with Galloway's newer "grim" versions. The anthology works well for short story collections and folktale curriculum units. Anne O'Malley
From the Publisher
These eight chilling tales are based on the well-known fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm, Charles Perrault, and Hans Christian Andersen. Each offers perspective that is hideously fascinating, startlingly imaginative, and beautifully written. In a futuristic retelling of "Little Red Riding Hood" a young girl named Ruby inhabits a frightening world in which clever mutated beasts stalk humans. In a poignant version of "Jack and the Beanstalk" the giantess explains her people's urgent need for the ground bones of the lesser species they hunt. Fantastical yet terrifyingly believable, Priscilla Galloway's Truly Grim Tales will forever change the way readers view these familiar childhood stories.
From the Inside Flap
at I intended to eat them is a fabrication. People will make up anything I did intend to observe them closely under conditions of stress, and more blood would have been very useful to me.In the end, I would probably have let them go back home. Their father, my husband, was making my life as wretched as his own. In the end, it would have been a choice between having the children back and pretending (for a while) to be a happy-ever-after fairy-tale family, or getting rid of all three of them and moving on.from "The Prince"Suddenly I looked down. The current damsel was gloriously attired in something with pearls and ermine trim.I hardly saw her dress. My eyes fixed on her feet.Glass! I could see right through her shoes!I stopped immediately. She almost fell. I steadied her.My eyes had not left her feet as they nestled like twin birds in their delicate little cages. Such feet! Oh, Stephen, you'd have loved them t
From the Back Cover
at I intended to eat them is a fabrication. People will make up anything I did intend to observe them closely under conditions of stress, and more blood would have been very useful to me.In the end, I would probably have let them go back home. Their father, my husband, was making my life as wretched as his own. In the end, it would have been a choice between having the children back and pretending (for a while) to be a happy-ever-after fairy-tale family, or getting rid of all three of them and moving on.from "The Prince"Suddenly I looked down. The current damsel was gloriously attired in something with pearls and ermine trim.I hardly saw her dress. My eyes fixed on her feet.Glass! I could see right through her shoes!I stopped immediately. She almost fell. I steadied her.My eyes had not left her feet as they nestled like twin birds in their delicate little cages. Such feet! Oh, Stephen, you'd have loved them t
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- Release Date 08/01/1995
- Author Priscilla Galloway
- Language English
- Company Delacorte Books for Young Readers
- Weight 7.2 ounces
- Dimensions 5.75 x 0.5 x 9.25 inches
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