The Goose Girl (The Books of Bayern #1)
Shannon Hale
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Pages: 400
Genre: Fairytale, Fantasy, Young Adult
Anidori-Kiladra Talianna Isilee, Crown Princess of Kildenree, spends the first years of her life under her aunt's guidance learning to communicate with animals. As she grows up Ani develops the skills of animal speech, but is never comfortable speaking with people, so when her silver-tongued lady-in-waiting leads a mutiny during Ani's journey to be married in a foreign land, Ani is helpless and cannot persuade anyone to assist her.
Becoming a goose girl for the king, Ani eventually uses her own special, nearly magical powers to find her way to her true destiny. Shannon Hale has woven an incredible, original and magical tale of a girl who must find her own unusual talents before she can become queen of the people she has made her own.
The Goose
Girl was the book that reintroduced me to fairytale adaptations. When I had
been young I had eaten up anything by Gail Carson Levine, in complete awe that
someone could take a fairytale and adapt it making it into their own. At the
time there were not many other books like that, so I ran out and slowly forgot
my love. Now, however, thanks to The
Goose Girl I am back to devouring as many adaptations that I can find.
The
Goose Girl is an adaptation very true to the most well known
version of "The Goose Girl" fairytale. Yet, the world that it takes
place in only starts out as the fairytale, Hale takes ideas only mentioned in
maybe a line in the fairytale and extrapolates them into full on pieces of the
world building. You can tell that she sat and went "Why did this character
do what they did in the tale?" "Why did these characters believe so
easily?" "Why does this happen?" and then went on to find a way
to explain it all.
The idea of people-speaking, animal-speaking and
nature-speaking is such an awesome idea that it sparks my imagination
completely and truly does open the book up to being a series (as the rest of
the Books of Bayern deal with different types of speaking).
Then of course there is the characterization, which
Hale is a master at. Ani, especially, is a joy to read. Here is a character
whose growth happens naturally and obviously. At the beginning she is timid,
awkward, and self-depreciatory. Yet as the story unfolds she becomes less naïve
and learns to trust herself and how to assert herself.
Finally, I was impressed by the fact that cultural
differences between kingdoms are actually addressed. So many fantasy books have
close by kingdoms have the exact same
culture, when really they would have at least slightly different ways of
looking at things. I liked learning Bayern's customs with Ani.
This is one of my all-time favourite books and I'm
glad I had an excuse to reread it (My Midsummer's Night Giveaway) and write a
review to post for you all. It is a magical, straightforward fairytale fantasy
with excellent world building and characters. Even having reread it so many
times there is maybe only one or two small things that start to trip me up (and
usually with books I've read so much there are a lot more). I recommend this to
any lover of fairytales or fantasy in general.
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