I gave up on Christian fiction some time ago, but we sell so much of it in our bookshop that it's always available, and this one wasn't part of a series or an overt romance.(Saints preserve us!) And I liked the cover (yes, I know). So I grabbed it to read as we traveled over Christmas.
Pleasant surprise: the author was literate, and the book was vaguely based on the Sleeping Beauty motif in addition to being an allegorical quest for God. The main character is VERY afraid to reconnect with her estranged father and has been told a bunch of lies about his character. I really enjoyed that perspective.
I'll read almost any twice-told or fractured fairy and folk tales, so naturally enjoyed this theme. Also, that Christian writing flaw prone to insult the intelligence by providing symbolism and hints over and over again that this book is really about God, was less in evidence. CS Lewis writes just about the best allegorical fiction ever, and Chesterton writes them so well you can't actually tell what they're about (oh, wait a minute). For the most part, it seems that Christian writers are afraid you might not get it, so everything is overblown and hyperbolic and at some point somebody delivers The Sermon. Sometimes I wonder if bad Christian writing is frighteningly like an inoculation: a little dose, watered down, might keep you from having a real encounter with God--which is scary and intensely real and life-changing when it happens.
Hunt got past that "gonna help you get it" crap largely by making her main character very naive, sheltered and afraid of life. You got what was coming ages before she did, but it didn't feel so insulting as a reader because she really was that out of it, yet still likable.
Saying all this makes me feel critical and at odds with those I don't want to be at odds with, because as a Christian I want to like what other Christians write.
Still, maybe Art isn't meant to serve a proselytising (British spelling alert) agenda because if you're honestly convinced that what you're saying is true, you don't have to bend everything around you to make it fit into your worldview. Shades of Voltaire's comments, but anyway, I enjoyed the book and the way Hunt writes. I'm inspired to explore a couple more stand-alone Christian novels from our shop to see if there're any more hidden gems amongst them.