Yes indeed, as someone who has always enjoyed fairy and folk tales, I simply adore how (and like actually quite common in Slavic lore), Susan Price has her 1987 Carnegie Medal winning original young adult fairy tale novel The Ghost Drum being presented as a story told by an ever-present narrator, in this particular case by an educated and talking cat (delightfully reminding me both of Charles Perrault's Puss in Boots and E.T.A. Hoffmann's Tomcat Murr), that at the beginning and at the head of each chapter of The Ghost Drum said tethered feline introduces the scenes and the characters and with at the conclusion of The Ghost Drum, the tale-telling cat then asking the listener (or the reader) to pass along the featured account so that it may continue its journey (and which of course plays homage to the fact that originally storytelling was oral in nature, that written literature only came along much later and of course owes its very existence to word-of-mouth).
And well, considering that The Ghost Drum is obviously absolutely, totally meant to be read as a fairy tale (or as a folk tale), Susan Price also does definitely tend to keep her featured text almost entirely focused on setting, description and bien sûr on the presented plot and not really all that much on character development, not on providing literary depth and nuances. But very much thankfully so this, for indeed, if The Ghost Drum were textually concentrating on individual characters and on their external and internal lives and thoughts, one could in my opinion really no longer be considering Price's narrative as being a true fairy tale (and yes, even an original one), since with fairy and with folk tales, the presented plot is generally meant to be epical and the different scenarios and events being shown to occur are what is essential and that ALL characters actually should mirror this and are often really more narrational devices to move along the story from beginning to climax, to the conclusion. So yes indeed, that Susan Price totally does the latter with The Ghost Drum, it really makes me hugely textually happy, as far too often original novels and novellas labelled as fairy and folktale like kind of seem to drown what is essential, namely the storyline, in philosophy, internal character traits and their development.
Therefore, that the The Ghost Drum basically features a verbally very much straight-forward moving tale full full full of a multitude of facts and events, featuring Chingis' journey from birth to death and back to birth again (as a woman of power, as a female shaman and white witch, as a type of Baba Yaga figure who even resides in a hut on top of the well known in Slavic tradition chicken legs) to fight against evil in the form of Tsar Guidon and his sister Magaretta, as well as the jealous and obviously misogynist shaman Kuzma (and to place the rescued Tsarevitch Safa onto the throne), yes this all has made for a very exciting and interesting reading experience for me with regard to The Ghost Drum, and with me totally adoring how Susan Price cleverly uses not only Slavic folklore but also Western European myth (such as for example the Greek myth of Persephone, and that in order to return from the land of the dead, one must not eat or drink anything whilst there) and how she also inverts the classic fairy tale trope of the princess in the tower by having with Tzarevitch Safa an imprisoned prince in the tower. And of course and finally, The Ghost Drum with its textual focus on the external happenings and not on the internal, not on what and how the characters inhabiting the pages of The Ghost Drum think, feel and have as their Weltanschauung, this of course (to and for me) totally renders The Ghost Drum into a true and bona fide fairy tale and not into a fantasy story with some folkloristic and fairy tale elements.