By Carson Levine
Illustrated by Mark Elliott
HarperCollins, 1999
Genre
Fractured Fairy Tale, Humor
Awards
None Known
Review
Princess
Sonora was blessed by a fairy to be 10x as smart as anyone in the world! But she
was also cursed to fall asleep for 100 years when she pricked herself on a
spinning needle. Sonora decided that since she'd be sleeping so long
later, there was no need for sleep now and spent her time reading all the books
in the royal libraries. She found
answers to all the questions she could think of (and made sure she told
everyone about them) and made more efficient ways for the servants to do their
chores, but everyone just found her to be annoying. Sonora's parents had
found a prince for her to marry, but he was boring! Sonora decided that after
his visit, she would prick herself by choice with a spindle hidden in her
closet so she could fall asleep and avoid the marriage all together. This
plan didn't work and Sonora accidentally pricks herself while the prince is still
in the castle, so he fell asleep along with Sonora and the rest of the castle.
An astonished shepherd saw the castle become covered in a wall of
thorns. Eventually, Prince Christopher,
a descendant of Prince Melvin XX and had always been curious about everything,
decided to investigate the “missing” kingdom.
He found Sonora asleep, covered in cobwebs. After much debate of
what to do, he decided to kiss her. Naturally, Sonora woke up. So happy to have found someone who can answer
his questions, and happy she had found someone who wanted to hear her answers,
the couple decided to get married. This short
but humorous retelling of Sleeping Beauty will make readers chuckle at the “intelligence”
of Sonora and the reactions of other characters. There are illustrations every few chapters that add to the story and show significant occurrences.
Opinion
A very amusing retelling that younger tweens will like just for the blatant humor and older readers will enjoy for the way it makes fun of predictable fairy tale characters.
Ideas
This book is a great example of a fractured fairy tale and is a good way to introduce this genre to tweens, either in the classroom or at the library with a display.
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