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Search tags: Cinderella:-Ninja-Warrior
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review 2014-07-10 04:41
DNF: Cinderella Ninja Warrior
Cinderella: Ninja Warrior - Maureen McGowan

I am going to start this by saying this isn't a DNF given out of intense dislike and hatred. This is given out of having different expectations from the book than it gave me.

 

Let me explain. Cinderella Ninja Warrior, one of the best titles ever by the way, is a Twisted Tale. A sort of Choose Your Own Adventure book. Or at least that it how I interpreted it. There are points in the story where you get to chose where it goes next, which to me is Choose Your Own Adventure. But there is only one ending. No matter what you decide, the book ends the same. Once I realized that my sails were deflated. I made it one more chapter before just giving up.

 

The book wasn't bad. A little too teenage angst perfect protagonist for my taste, but it was a different retelling of Cinderella.It was still the same general story but with magic and ninjas. If I were a preteen (the age group suggested for this book), I would have ate this up.

 

But alas I am not. I read it for the Choose Your Own Adventure aspects of it. I wanted to relive my Goosebumps days where I ended up a zombie or falling out of a window and there were bad endings and good endings. This isn't that. The destination is the same no matter what you do; it's just the journey that changes.

 

I ended up giving my copies of this and Sleeping Beauty Vampire Hunter to a coworker who has a preteen. I think she will love them. 

 

On the topic of Choose Your Own Adventure books, do they make Chose Your Own Adventure books for adults? I would love that. Love it to pieces. I know my sister mentioned to me that there is a romance novel video game in Japan where she is teaching that is choose your own adventure, sort of. There are six guys and the choices you make determine who you end up with. It's super popular. Maybe I should just go find some Goosebumps... 

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review 2014-03-16 03:43
Cinderella: Ninja Warrior by Maureen McGowan
Cinderella: Ninja Warrior - Maureen McGowan

I first spotted this in a used bookstore. I considered buying it (Cinderella + ninja warrior = YAY!), but after I saw that it was a “choose your own adventure” book, I opted to get it from the library instead.

I'll get this out of the way right now: this was a huge disappointment as a “choose your own adventure” book. Despite there being eight possible routes, there was only one ending – every choice eventually led to the exact same chapter 9. Also, readers could only make choices at three points in the story.

All right, moving on. Cinderella's mother, who was a powerful wizard, died giving birth to her. Several years later, her father married another woman and promptly died, leaving Cinderella at the mercy of her stepmother and her two stepsisters, Gwendolyn and Agatha. Cinderella's stepmother is also a powerful wizard, one who desperately wants to get her hands on Cinderella's mother's wand. She keeps an eye on Cinderella, in case the girl knows where it is, and, to be safe, turns Cinderella into a prisoner. Magic keeps Cinderella trapped in the basement, except when her housekeeping skills are needed.

Cinderella doesn't plan to stay a prisoner forever. Her cat, Max, found a book for her called Way of the Warrior, and she has been secretly practicing ninja skills ever since. Her ninja training has even unlocked some of the magical ability she inherited from her mother. When Ty, a handsome royal messenger, arrives at her stepmother's doorstep with news of a royal ball, Cinderella cautiously begins to hope that she might be able to leave the house for a bit and maybe find an opportunity to escape. She becomes even more excited when she learns that there will be a magic competition. The winner will receive training from the royal wizard himself.

I did not start this book with high expectations. At most, I was hoping for something that was entertaining and a bit cheesy. That's pretty much what I got.

Cinderella was a self-taught ninja warrior who, depending on which choices you made, could stack glass goblets 15 feet high, battle multiple thieves with a broomstick, and create a protective tornado around herself just by spinning really fast. Sometimes the cheese was a little too much, even for me, but mostly I loved it.

Every choice had some aspects I liked and some I didn't. One choice determined whether Cinderella had to battle thieves or stack goblets. I preferred the one that had her battling thieves for several reasons: her awesomeness was slightly more grounded in reality (the goblet stacking severely strained my suspension of disbelief), and Agatha got a chance to stand out a little more as the weak-willed but not completely horrible stepsister. However, in that chapter, Cinderella also willingly pulled an all-nighter to finish one of the nearly impossible chores her stepmother assigned her, in the hope that she might be allowed outside for a little while as a reward. I hated that, because it was already pretty clear that Cinderella's stepmother preferred to reward excellent work with even more demands.

There were two other points in the story where readers were asked to make choices. One of those determined how the magic competition went, while the other determined how traditional the story would be (would the prince go looking for Cinderella with her glass slipper in hand, or would he have part of her locket?).

It made more sense for Cinderella to choose to enter the wandless portion of the magic competition, since she had far more practice working without a wand, but she

was almost disgustingly perfect in that route. I liked that the other route showed her experiencing more difficulties. However, if you chose that route, some of the wording in a future possible choice wasn't appropriate. Just because certain routes were possible didn't mean that they actually worked 100%.

(spoiler show)


As far as the final choice went, I definitely preferred the one that led to the prince searching for Cinderella with part of her locket. One of the things I've always disliked about the Cinderella story is that the prince could potentially have ended up with anyone, as long as her feet fit in Cinderella's shoes. Who's to say that Cinderella is the only single girl with tiny feet? In the option with the glass slippers, the prince went one level of stupid further and

simply accepted the first girl who presented him with the other slipper, without even asking her to try it on. I was disappointed with him, to say the least.

(spoiler show)


All in all, the story was okay, although I wish Cinderella hadn't been quite so dense. She may have had amazing ninja skills, but her reasoning abilities could have used some work. I figured out that

Ty the messenger was Prince Tiberius almost immediately. I didn't expect Cinderella to figure it out that quickly, but she was hit over the head with inconsistencies in Ty's behavior and appearance often enough that Ty's confession shouldn't have come as much of a surprise.

(spoiler show)


Considering that the “choose your own adventure” aspect turned out to be fairly disappointing, I think this book would have been better had it been written like any other novel. Maybe the cheese factor would have made it a hard sell? I can't be the only one who occasionally likes cheesy reads, though.

I'm currently debating whether to try Sleeping Beauty: Vampire Slayer.

 

Rating Note: I gave the "choose your own adventure" aspect 1 star. My rating for the story varied depending on the route I chose but was never higher than 3 stars. I decided that the best average was 2 stars.

 

(Original review, with read-alikes and watch-alikes, posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.)

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text 2014-03-14 17:02
Reading progress update: I've read 25%
Cinderella: Ninja Warrior - Maureen McGowan

Well, crap. Even after finishing only two routes, I can say without a doubt that this is a failure as a "choose your own adventure" book. Don't they usually have more than one possible ending?

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text 2014-03-14 00:46
My "choose your own adventure" book has arrived!
Cinderella: Ninja Warrior - Maureen McGowan

Cinderella: Ninja Warrior came in for me via ILL today. I really should finish Eighth Grade Bites before I start this, but that book hasn't been working out well for me (so boring). CNW has eight different routes, so maybe I'll just read through one and then get back to vampire boy and his eating habits...

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text 2014-02-28 21:49
This exists
Cinderella: Ninja Warrior - Maureen McGowan

I came very close to buying this today. It's a "choose your own adventure" book, which is why I was able to resist. But I want to try to get it through the library. I hope it's as crazy as it seems like it should be.

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