Hilarious book, just hilarious! Listened to this on a road trip to Wisconsin to visit the wife's 96 year old great aunt. Had never heard of it and was not looking forward to it, so I was surprised at how many times I actually laughed aloud, and loudly! This book is directed to tweens, which the car was actually carrying, but I actually think some of the humor--as in much of the best of humor for kids--is directed at the adults Healy is hoping are reading along with their kids. One indication of it is that I think I and the wife actually laughed more than they did. That kind of humor. I actually laughed so hard a couple of times that I cried, and this was never the case for the kids, though they all said they loved it.
So the title of the book is clearly a tween title, generic. And it has all these various Prince Charmings and princesses in it, so that feels kind of generic, right? But it's a contemporary feel. Think: The True Story of the Three Little Pigs--told from the perspective of the wolf, applied to the familiar fantasy world. The idea here is, step 1) Make fun of almost every one of the prince charmings, and reveal they all have "issues,"--anger management, memory, sufficient testosterone to truly be a hero, and so on--and make it clear that the bards who have told tales about them completely romanticized them. The princes are really, really imperfect, and hilariously so, but then, reverse course and 2) explore the idea of heroism through their ordinariness. They are like us, yes. And then, once we have broken them all down to our size, make it an actual adventure where they actually have to work with and help each other, through the League of Princes (yes, like the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen). So then the goofballs and schlubs actually become somewhat admirable and yes, even charming.
So it's a bit of a pomo/feminist/Rob Reiner critique, and believe me the Ellas and Snow Whites and the other princesses take their hits in this one, too, though it is really more about men as idiots.
Prince Liam. Prince Frederic. Prince Duncan. Prince Gustav. These are the princes who saved Sleeping Beauty, Cinderella, Snow White, and Rapunzel, respectively, in case you were wondering. And they have to battle trolls (all named Troll, and not too bright), and other monsters and witches.
I do not think I would have quite given this five stars had it not been for the pitch perfect reading of Branson Pinchot, who gets all the accents down: Scottish, Irish, English, French, California surfer dude (who is Prince Duncan, who comes up with idea of writing this tale to correct the bards's renditions), Troll, witch, and so on. Pinchot really nails it. But so does Healy, in his first book??! So good.