I seem to be reading thematically of late because the book for this post, like the last one, deals with dark, emotionally disturbing subject matter. However, unlike Living Dead Girl with its chilling realism, Tender Morsels uses fantasy and fairy tale to explore issues like abuse and violence.This Printz Award Honor winner by Australian writer Margo Lanagan is a compelling revamping of the fairy tale "Snow White and Rose Red." The novel begins with a short scene narrated by a vulgar and earthy dwarf in a setting that resembles the Dark Ages of Europe. This is a prologue of sorts and the story line quickly shifts to the story of the mother of Snow White and Rose Red...a dreadful story as Lanagan reveals with great subtlety and drawn out suspense.
Just when you can't take any more of the cruelty the girls' mother endures, the tone lightens and she and her daughters find peace and loveliness in a magical "other" world. Snow White and Rose Red grow up, and of course, begin to explore the forbidden, the world which their mother would do anything to protect them from. At this point, the sense of inevitability pervading the novel had me by the throat...that delicious sense you get in a horror movie that something bad is about to happen. But I definitely didn't foresee the twists and turns the story would take as it spun out and in this way the novel proved its maturity...it is literary and complex and worth the effort. It reminded me a little of reading Toni Morrison or Louise Erdrich.
Though this is based on a fairy tale, the story telling is original and innovative, using fantasy to explore how violence and ugliness exist along side innocence and love. Fairy tale or no, this is a most human story.
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