sophia_sol: photo of a 19th century ivory carving of a fat bird (Default)
soph ([personal profile] sophia_sol) wrote2021-06-09 04:51 pm

The Two Princesses of Bamarre, by Gail Carson Levine

A childhood nostalgia reread. Gail Carson Levine is known for her fairy tale retellings, and this book is definitely fairy-tale-inspired, but not based on any particular story. It tells its own story instead, and I am deeply fond of many of the things it does!

It's the story of two teen sisters, one who's brave and forthright and eager for adventure, and one who's a quiet and anxious homebody. When the brave sister (Meryl) is struck down by a magical illness that has beset the country of Bamarre for centuries, the anxious sister (Addie) goes on a quest to find the cure to save her sister.

I love that this is a story where the most important relationship in it is a sibling relationship; and that although the sisters are extremely different from each other, they both love each other and value each other deeply. It's wonderful!

I also love that an extended portion of Addie's questing time is taken up with her being the captive of a dragon, Vollys. Addie may not be a fighter like Meryl is, but the way she handles the situation with Vollys shows her strengths and abilities, and honestly the whole thing is really interesting. I love Vollys as a character! She may be terrible, but also she's genuinely understandable as a person with her own priorities and sense of appropriate behaviours, even if that conflicts pretty directly with those of her "guest"!

My other favourite thing about the book is the constant poetic references. Bamarre is a country with a founding myth written in epic poetry, and the characters are constantly thinking about and referencing that founding myth. There's extensive sections of poetry quoted within the text, even, because it's so deeply important to the characters. Not all of the poetry is...amazing.... But some of it really manages to capture something, and there are sections of poetry from this book that have stuck with me decades later because it's just right. (and then we get a snippet of dragon poetry at one point too, to contrast with the heroism of Drualt the killer of dragons, and I LOVE that we get to see that alternate perspective!)

The book does have a Compulsory Heterosexuality ending for both sisters, which is a bit of a yawn; Meryl's is particularly bad because she and her partner in heterosexuality meet and get together in a fairly permanent-seeming way in like....a day or two. All off-screen. The romances feel Very Tacked On is what I'm saying. So that's annoying!

But overall I still have an immense fondness for this book. I love it.
aurumcalendula: gold, blue, orange, and purple shapes on a black background (Default)

[personal profile] aurumcalendula 2021-06-10 01:45 am (UTC)(link)
I remember loving this one when I was younger! (I haven't read it in ages)

It's very annoying to reread stuff and run smack into Compulsory Heterosexuality (...which I suspect would happen with most of the fantasy books I loved in middle school).
aurumcalendula: gold, blue, orange, and purple shapes on a black background (Default)

[personal profile] aurumcalendula 2021-06-10 01:35 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah - I think I ended up ignoring and/or oblivious to it at the time, which is part of the reason I find it so annoying on reread. Same (re: books now)!
genarti: Small girl marching across a field with bundle over her shoulder, text "the road goes ever on and on." ([misc] never know where you'll end up)

[personal profile] genarti 2021-06-10 03:46 am (UTC)(link)
Ooh, I don't think I'd ever heard of this book, and it sounds very cool! (Except the tacked-on Compulsory Heterosexuality, but oh well.)
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[personal profile] genarti 2021-06-10 01:09 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, that's where I heard that name! Yeah, I liked that book when I read it, but I read it as a teen when I was already older than the target audience and haven't reread in years, so my memory of it is pretty vague. If I'd stopped and thought, I would have assumed that she probably had other books, but certainly hadn't encountered them. Both premises seem like fun spins on standard tropes, though.
chestnut_pod: A close-up photograph of my auburn hair in a French braid (Default)

[personal profile] chestnut_pod 2021-06-10 05:00 am (UTC)(link)
It says something that I remember how upset I was at Meryl's fate, and the lovely cover with both sisters, and the Gray Death, and… completely forgot there even were love interests.
lirazel: Sara and her father in the film version of A Little Princess ([film] stirs the imagination)

[personal profile] lirazel 2021-06-10 01:19 pm (UTC)(link)
I haven't read this one! But I adore Ella Enchanted to bits so I should seek it out--it sounds lovely!