Reread June 2025.
“She would bleed to death and it would be painless. But she would bleed to death one drop at a time.”
The King and Queen decide their only son, The Prince, needs a mission. (Major callback here—the King is the grandson of the prince with Rapunzel in Magic.)
The plague in the tenth kingdom—a kingdom now hidden from the other nine.
The Huntsman. Trip to the edge of the Far Mountain. His dreams: the mysterious redhead.
Petra: Red Riding Hood.
The tale of Beauty’s birth—the king and the water witch. The prophecy; the spindles.
The diamond slippers.
The Sleeping City.
Two Queens: twins.
“But she was more than that: She was Beauty and the Beast.”
Toby, the massive blue-grey wolf.
Bloodlust.
Rumplestiltskin, and his daughter Rapunzel: The witch’s bargain.
Beauty’s parties.
“Sometimes, everyone needs to let the beast inside them out for a while.”
The prince’s bargain with Rumplestiltskin…
He was for her, and she was for him.
Petra and Toby. Petra and the wolf.
The plan. 🥰 🩸 😍
The real Beauty in this book? How Sarah Pinborough weaves everything together and wraps it up with a bow. 🎁 🙌🏻
“Don’t do this. This kind of deal is worse than a witch’s curse.”
2022 review.
Even though this is the third installment in this series, it’s actually a prequel to both of the previous stories.
This is essentially a mashup of Red Riding Hood, Sleeping Beauty, Beauty and the Beast, Rapunzel, and some others interspersed.
It's insightful to see the Huntsman’s point of view. He’s an excellent character, and having him around makes the Prince slightly less insufferable.
Rumplestiltskin is a surprise. The Beast is a masterful turn of heel, as is the reveal of Petra’s great-grandmother’s true identity.
The prose is beautiful, the characterizations are creative, and the plot twists remain unforeseeable. This one ranges from violent and bloody to brutal and sexy.
The writing is just brilliant. Only Sarah P could have me reading the retellings of fairy tales—and loving them.