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How a Mother Weaned Her Girl from Fairy Tales

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
A Time Out New York Best Book of the Year. "[Bernheimer is] one of literature's foremost champions of the fairy tale." Nylon

Elegant and brutal, the stories in Kate Bernheimer's latest collection occupy a heightened landscape, where the familiar cedes to the grotesque and nonsense just as often devolves into terror. These are fairy tales out of time, renewing classic stories we think we know, like one of Bernheimer's girls, whose hands of steel turn to flowers, leaving her beautiful but alone.

"Deftly blends gloomy fairy tales with existential manifestos. Nine nimble stories confront a spectrum of suffering; loneliness, addiction, poverty, and death lay exposed with open language for all to interpret." —Entrophy

"[Bernheimer], an impassioned advocate for the relevancy of the fairy-tale genre, fills the whole strange, lovely book with such gems, reinventing traditional, timeless tales for new readers." —Time Out New York

"With dinosaurs and pink sisters, shadows and talking dolls, librarians and totems, Bernheimer presents haunting looks at mothers and daughters, the magic of childhood, and the power of illusion, fantasy, and dreams." —San Francisco Book Review

"I'll read anything [Kate Bernheimer] writes, and I'll undoubtedly learn more about myself and my own writing than from 100 other books. Truth is, I hope every young writer is lucky enough to discover a particular writer who speaks to her more than any other, a writer whose words reach out through the pages and touch her heart, the way Kate Bernheimer has done for me." —Electric Literature

"Bernheimer manages to tickle the cerebrum without sacrificing surface pleasures." —Minneapolis Star-Tribune
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 8, 2014
      Bernheimer (Horse, Flower, Bird) offers up a strange little collection of stories with only a tenuous connection to classic fairy tales. The protagonists of yore have been replaced with young girls and women in the leads. Many of these tales lack any villain and those that appear are shadowy figures, literally so in "The Girl with the Talking Shadow." Emotions raised are on the tame side as well, with melancholy and unease taking the place of sorrow and dread. Although one story suggests that these tales may, in some way, involve the author (mention is made of an author character that has written a story similar to one earlier in the collection) that suggestion isn't carried through, so any sense of autobiographical meaning hidden within is denied. The format itself is also lacking in heft: many pages contain only half a page (or less) of text. Only those readers who are fairy tale completists or who prefer the quirky will relish this volume.

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  • OverDrive Read
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Languages

  • English

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