5 Favorite Fairytales

Mothers of Enchantment by Kate Wolford is an anthology of stories retelling tales of Fairy Godmothers who have granted wishes to damsels in distress in the past. We know the key roles that Fairy Godmothers have played in ensuring the happy ending. But what happens to them? What is their story? What do they wish for? Find it all in this anthology.

My favorite tales from this anthology are:

  • Returning the Favor by Lynden Wade
  • Face in the Mirror by Sonni de Soto
  • Modern Magic by Carter Lappin
  • In the Name of the Gold by Claire Noelle Thomas
  • Flick: The Fairy Godmother by Kim Malinowski

RETURNING THE FAVOR by Lynden Wade

This retelling takes us through the life of a Fairy Godmother who gets a surprising visit from one of her past clients. You will be surprised by the journey this story takes you on. The Fairy Godmother’s past and her journey towards becoming one tugs at your heart.
P.S. : Do not be fooled by looks.

FACE IN THE MIRROR by Sonni de Soto

A Beauty and the Beast retelling where a spoiled brat gets cursed and can only become beautiful when he finds the person who cares the most about him. A Fairy Godmother who communicates through a mirror, teaches the prince to become self-sufficient and unknowingly turns out to be the key ingredient in the recipe for a dinner that will break his curse.
P.S. : Blood isn’t always thicker than water.

MODERN MAGIC by Carter Lappin

A Fairy Godmother who starts her day like the rest of us with coffee and checking her emails. With a scotch-taped wand and a misspelled Starbucks order she appears for her damsel who is in distress over attending the dreaded party. Transformed by the Fairy Godmother with a smashing new outfit and a stretch limo, she heads to the party where she meets someone who finds her to be the perfect fit.
P.S. : Dress for the job you want.

IN THE NAME OF THE GOLD by Claire Noelle Thomas

A Fairy Godfather turns hay into gold for a girl whose choices surprise him whenever he visits. But every favor comes with a price.
P.S. : A rose by any other name will still wither.

FLICK: THE FAIRY GODMOTHER by Kim Malinowski

You will flick through these pages fast as the story takes you on a journey where an apprentice with anxiety disorder fights to protect humans from their own misdeeds. A strong fairytale with a dash of romance is the perfect concoction of adventure and love.
P.S. : Till Death does its part.

If you enjoy fairytales and their retellings with strong female characters check this book at the links below:

https://www.worldweaverpress.com/blog

https://amzn.to/3B2jZW2

https://amzn.to/3Kw2lNT

https://www.worldweaverpress.com/store/p184/Mothers_of_Enchantment.html

VOLATILE

Sadie ran faster than ever as the wind blew in her ears, and her lungs began to ache.  She tried not to think about her sister. Her sweet, delicate little sister Mazie, whose photo now laid crumpled in her shorts pocket. She tried hard not to think about the mail she had received two nights ago. But all she could think about was that package. It held Mazie’s bloodied shirt and a note threatening to kill her unless Sadie gave all her powers to control time to the kidnappers. She ran like the wind trying to find a way. Time had never felt so delicate.  

As she ran toward the last street to reach her finish line, a helicopter hovered close by. A man that she and her sister had evaded for years jumped from it. He opened a bag that looked like a black hole. It could take anything it wanted.  

“Come on, Sadie. What are you waiting for?” He spat at her.  

She noticed Mazie tied in the helicopter, stirring slightly out of her unconsciousness. She knew the man staring at her was hungry for power. He had taken her childhood and her future. All that mattered was the time she had now. She slowed her movement, ready to give up her power.

But something shifted in the air. Tiny swirls of wind turned into massive gusts until the helicopter was spinning all around. The blades kept rotating faster until the entire helicopter blew into smithereens with the man lying on the ground with his open bag of powers. All it took in it were the shards of helicopter and gusts of wind that seemed to have calmed down.  

Sadie ran to her sister lying sprawled at the end of the street. She stared at the beautiful delicate face.  

“He wanted power, sis. I gave him mine,” said Mazie as her fingers twitched, moving the soft air around her.  

“I know,” said Sadie with tears streaming down her cheeks as she held her sister close. 

After all, time was the most delicate thing to handle.

Books That Got Me Through 2020

The one good thing about 2020 was that I finally found the time to catch up on my rising pile of books. Here are some of the books that got me through 2020.

HIS DARK MATERIALS by Philip Pullman

2020 was a hellish year. So it would be hardly surprising that the most interesting books that got me through it have been the trilogy, His Dark Materials. Every book in this trilogy was a page-turner. Lyra’s journey throughout the trilogy has been shown in such a vast, fantastic way. And it was not just the fascinating places and characters that she met along the way that made the books gripping. But it was also about the situations where she had to make decisions without complete knowledge of the possible ramifications of each decision. There were parts in Lyra’s journey throughout the trilogy where the saying, “Ignorance is bliss” was apt for her.  

Also, the character growth shown throughout the trilogy was beautiful. The most villainous characters, in the beginning, ended up somewhere in the gray area. I loved the way Philip Pullman showed the dichotomy between reason and passion. The most scientific character with the curiosity to seek more knowledge had a passionate nature. And the most devoted character was shown to be someone who acts with reason while doing the best to avoid clouded emotions. These are the sort of books to read if anyone wants to experience a thousand emotions in about 1200 pages. 

LUCKY MAN by Michael J. Fox

While the world was grappling with the unexpected surge of a viral disease, I read about the legend grappling with an unexpected disease as his career surged aboard the DeLorean. Reading about his journey from childhood to the day that he had to leave Spin City was just so poignant and humbling. From being broke and defeated in LA to when he became a household name to when he had to step back from it all was a rollercoaster of emotions. I have never been as hooked by a memoir before. It was so compelling, reading about him looking back on his childhood and the traits that he carried with him through the future, the emotional struggles that he faced through the years while landing different acting gigs. It truly felt like I was reading a hero’s journey. He did not defeat all the monsters. But he kept fighting through with his comrades by his side.

PRETTY GIRLS by Karin Slaughter 

It had been a long time since I read a mystery thriller, and this book reminded me why. Because the truth is horror genre is thrilling, and the thriller genre is horrifying. The horror genre is generally fantasy-based but, mystery thrillers have a realistic setting making them scarier.

But despite all the nightmares I had after reading this, I would call this book a masterpiece. The way it was written from different character perspectives with letters from their father connecting the dots between chapters was beautiful. It is hard to imagine the amount of research and the kind of mindset that the author must have required to write some of the grueling scenes. But the main thing that had me hooked to the book was the way it began with a personal loss and eventually unraveled a wider net of people responsible for a lot more than that one loss. Also, the way the main character tried to separate her memories and her current insights into someone close to her was gut-wrenching to read. So, to sum it up, it was scary and sad with a punch in my stomach, to say the least.

REMEMBER ME by Mary Higgins Clark 

Is there such a genre as a cozy thriller? Because this was both. It was intriguing, and the way all the characters’ lives wove in with each other made it seem like a cozy small-town mystery. From the woman suffering from Alzheimer’s to the local realtor/childhood friend to the widower to a waitress at a local bar, they were all interconnected with threads that kept weaving chapter after chapter. And, the way the author integrated elements of mental trauma and historical houses of pirates with an intriguing backstory made this book an epic page-turner. It was refreshing to read a crime thriller set in a close-knit community where a character dealing with personal trauma overcomes the killer despite being picked as an easy target. In the end, it was her wit and tenacity that caught the killer and not some amateur sleuth.

THE GRAVEYARD BOOK by Neil Gaiman 

A ghostly version of The Jungle Book with a boy raised in a graveyard made this book a fun read. The fact that every chapter was like an episode of a comedic fantasy made it more fun. It showed great adventures that Nobody would take you on.

If I ever recommend a reread, it would be this book. Every chapter had a sweet theme to it. Some were about friendship when the boy met a human visiting the graveyard and a witch buried without a headstone. Some have the theme of revenge when he scares the bullying kids from school or when the villains who killed his living parents came after him and his friend. Some of the chapters had lighthearted themes like celebration through the Dance Macabray or education when he was taught to fade out or made to learn all the sounds of supernatural creatures. If you have read this before, you can crack it open on any page and go on an adventure that Nobody has seen before.