We love fairy tales. Every culture offers them up: Scandinavians, Nigerians, Indonesians. Their commonality and the constant on-passing from parent to child attests to their endurance. Its as though they are somehow encoded in our DNA.
Theories abound about their importance in our social evolution: Tales of abandonment, death and monstrous behavior allow children to deal with their fears in an age-appropriate manner. The horror is remote, symbolic; the ritual of reading, sacred.
In the last 50 or so years, fairy tales such as Sleeping Beauty have been turned on their ear. The sleeping princess became part of a tourist attraction in a Fractured Fairy Tales segment of Rocky and Bullwinkle. Rather than rhapsodize about her beauty, the prince announces, to no one in particular, Asleep shes a gold mine! She was imagined as a lust object of sorts in the musical Into the Woods. In the second act, Rapunzels prince and his brother confess their yearnings for two other beautiful women: Snow White and Sleeping Beauty.
Childrens book authors have embraced the revisionist concept with great glee. What better way to build upon tradition while bucking it at the same time?
Jane Yolen, who has written at least 300 books and thousands of poems and short stories and is a Caldecott winner, poked fun of the sleeping princess stereotype in her 1981 childrens book Sleeping Ugly. In 1992s Briar Rose, Yolen let much of her story play out in Nazi Germany. Her latest take is Curse of the Thirteenth Fey, subtitled The True Tale of Sleeping Beauty.
Curse opens with the birth of Gorse, the 13th child in a family of Shouting Fey (fairies). The family sprawling, dysfunctional and loving is tied to the land and wishes of an evil king. When Talia, the kings daughter, is born the family is summoned to a christening.
Gorse, both accident- and illness-prone, leaves late for the ceremony, carrying her gift: a spindle with a piece of the Thread of Life wrapped around it. Parts of the narrative may seem familiar, but anyone who anticipates a happy prince and princess coupling at the end would best be advised to check their old-fashioned notions at the door.
Of course, Curse of the Thirteenth Fey is not merely the tale of Gorse; Yolen allows Sleeping Beauty to pop up now and then as a bit player of sorts. Readers do get an inkling of what might be in store for Princess Talia, but as with all fractured fairy tales, its not what most of us would imagine.




