But the tiny kingdom where they live, once so welcoming to all magical creatures, begins to grow distrustful. Meanwhile, in alternating chapters, we learn the enchantress’ backstory. She fell in love with the inventor Maurice and they married and had a daughter. Much of the dialogue from the Disney movie is used, but there are interesting deviations and insightful additions that really add to the characters. Together, logical Belle and the earnest Beast piece together how they are connected and look for a way to break the curse. But in this version, Belle quickly learns of the enchantress’ curse and discovers that it was cast by her own mother, magically forgotten by her family and community. Just like in the animated movie, a beautiful book-loving girl offers herself up as prisoner to a horrible beast, who is master of an enchanted castle. This is the premise of a delightful twist on the Disney version of Beauty and the Beast. A surprising and slightly unnecessary – in my point of view – death occurred, but it was an ending that will most likely gladden a reader’s heart nonetheless.What if Belle’s mother cursed the Beast? The last time I watched the aforementioned movie was three years ago, I believe, and I remember being unable to stop myself from laughing, and that, whenever he opened his mouth.įinally, even if there was a lot of villainy throughout the story, the conclusion will satisfy most of the readers. I will also add that I quite enjoyed the genie, even if he wasn’t as hilarious or present as in Aladdin. Doesn’t mean that it can’t have action, but it’s important to take a chapter here and there and focus a little more on the protagonists and less on the guest, mission, adventure, etc. There were also more than a handful of new roles in this story: friends and enemies as well as some characters meant for a cameo appearance, but I think that, the more characters a story possesses, the slower the pacing should be. It was fast-paced yet, to have the opportunity to enter the two main characters’ thoughts better and actually get attached to them, I wanted it to be slower. Liz Braswell wrote Jafar’s character representatively close to the ‘‘real’’ one and Abu’s too but, as for Aladdin and Jasmine and the sultan… not so much. Only a scant amount of characters were comparable in personality to the ones in the original version. This action-packed book had a rather sufficiently built world, easily visualized, but what was lacking – almost missing – was characterization. When there were some, they were mostly featuring Aladdin and Jasmine cuddling, kissing. Certainly, the author’s purpose was to twist the story we all know about and give us a different version of it, a darker one. What if it were Jafar who summoned the genie? What if he became the new sultan, was granted a great power no one else could surpass and took complete control of the city of Agrabah?Ĭan you recognize your dearly loved fairy tale in this? I couldn’t. And readers will never look at the story of Aladdin in the same way again. What happens next? A Street Rat becomes a leader. But soon their fight for freedom threatens to tear the kingdom apart in a costly civil war. Agrabah lives in fear, waiting for his third and final wish.To stop the power-mad ruler, Aladdin and the deposed Princess Jasmine must unite the people of Agrabah in rebellion. When Jafar steals the Genie’s lamp, he uses his first two wishes to become sultan and the most powerful sorcerer in the world. Each book asks the question: What if one key moment from a familiar Disney film was changed? This dark and daring version of Aladdin twists the original story with the question: What if Jafar was the first one to summon the Genie? Welcome to a new YA series that reimagines classic Disney stories in surprising new ways. Genres & Themes: Young Adult, Fantasy, Fairy Tale Retelling, Romance, Magic
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