Sleeper and the Spindle by Neil Gaiman

Published: 23 October 2014 (print)/22 September 2015 (audio) Goodreads badge
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc/Harper Audio
Pages: 72/1 hrs and 5 mins
Narrator: Jane Collingwood, Clare Corbett, Allan Corduner, Katherine Kingsley, Julian Rhind-Tutt, Lara Pulver, Niamh Walsh, Adjoa Andoh, Peter Forbes, John Sessions, Michael Maloney, Sean Baker
Format: Audiobook
Genre: Fairytale
★   ★   ★   ★ – 4 Stars

On the eve of her wedding, a young queen sets out to rescue a princess from an enchantment. She casts aside her fine wedding clothes, takes her chain mail and her sword and follows her brave dwarf retainers into the tunnels under the mountain towards the sleeping kingdom. This queen will decide her own future – and the princess who needs rescuing is not quite what she seems. Twisting together the familiar and the new, this perfectly delicious, captivating and darkly funny tale shows its creators at the peak of their talents.

I love the style of fairytale retellings where they are still trying to be fairytales. They aren’t modern, they aren’t new genres. Instead we get retellings that are like an existing fairytale. There’s the rule of three as well as characters who are wise and profound but also people who are miscreants and tricksters. Gaiman keeps the dark creativity of Grimm’s original tales and there is a bold and deep fairytale tone throughout.

I wasn’t expecting this to be anything other than Gaiman’s take on Sleeping Beauty but there is a mix of Snow White and Sleeping Beauty references in this retelling as the characters are clearly from these stories. They are recognisable but not tired tropes and Gaiman has a great new approach to them that turns expectations on their head in a really clever way.

The Queen (Snow White) and her dwarfs are in a neighbouring kingdom to one that fell prey to a sleeping spell seventy years prior. I love the implication that the fairytales all exist in the same universe (why not given the overlapping themes and magic in many of them?). As the sleeping sickness starts to spread it’s up to the queen to seek out and stop it before it impacts others in the realm.

It is a relatively quick read but it has a lasting impact like all fairytales want to do. I did this as an audiobook which probably was part of the experience. Oral storytelling works so well with fairytales and the dark twist on how fairytales are meant to be adds another layer. I know the book has amazing illustrations by Chris Riddell but the audio isn’t lacking a bit of magic either. Having so many narrators makes it a little like a radio play but it doesn’t feel like a radio play either. It’s a compelling story with each character given their own voice which brings it to life.

You can purchase Sleeper and the Spindle via the following

QBD | | Blackwell’s

Dymocks | Wordery

 Fishpond | Amazon | Amazon Aust

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