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This is a far more subtle and nuanced approach to fairy tales, and it is hard to see how our heroine will reconcile all these diametrically opposed demands. Both parties want freedom and happiness, and both, surely, have rights. And the shadow characters, while at times self-centred and greedy, can also be as loving and kindly as their other halves in the world above. Furthermore, the whole story is shot through with a hint of possible sorrow and tragedy awaiting September when (that is to say, if) she returns to the ordinary, non-magical world. It is a darker, more grow-up story with no guarantee of happy ever after. There are echoes of Alice in Wonderland, with odd, unsettling characters who allow traces of cruelty, greed and self-indulgence to peek out from beneath their apparent bonhomie, along with a generous dollop of charming and heart-warming nonsense. And like that book, it is well worth the time and effort a careful, patient and attentive reader will put into reading it. It is delightful, original, funny and scary — and at times it is also a little strange. Isn't that what a fairy tale should be?
To fully enjoy this book you really ought to read the first volume [[The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making by Catherynne Valente|The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making]]. We also have a review of [[The Girl Who Soared Over Fairyland and Cut the Moon in Two by Catherynne M Valente|The Girl Who Soared Over Fairyland and Cut the Moon in Two]]. And another book about a feisty young girl caught in a strange and bewildering world can be found in the excellent [[A Face Like Glass by Frances Hardinge]].
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