logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
back to top
Search tags: zelle
Load new posts () and activity
Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
review 2019-04-25 09:55
Blutiges Wunderland
Alice - Christina Henry

„Alice im Wunderland“ ist eine der Geschichten meines Lebens. Der Klassiker von Lewis Carroll begleitet mich, seit ich ein kleines Mädchen war. Ich besaß sie als Hörbuch auf Schallplatte und die 1951er Disney-Verfilmung auf Videokassette. Selbstverständlich habe ich auch die modernen Filme mit Johnny Depp gesehen. Mit meinem Tätowierer arbeite ich aktuell an meinem großen Waden-Tattoo, das die Grinsekatze, Herrn Knauf und den verwirrenden Wegweiser-Baum enthält. Die Geschichte fasziniert mich wie kaum eine zweite. Als ich erfuhr, dass die Autorin Christina Henry eine Adaption namens „Alice“ geschrieben hatte, war ich sofort Feuer und Flamme, weil das Buch die berühmte Protagonistin in einer prekären Rolle zeigt: als Insassin einer Psychiatrie.

 

In einem Krankenhaus in der Altstadt, hinter dicken Backsteinmauern, vegetiert eine junge Frau in einer Zelle vor sich hin. Sie wurde eingesperrt, weil sie blutüberströmt eine verrückte Geschichte von einem Kaninchen und einer Tee-Party erzählte. Ihr Name lautet Alice. Seit 10 Jahren ist die Anstalt ihre Herberge. Ihr einziger Gefährte ist ihr Zellennachbar Hatcher. Alice weiß, dass sie niemals entlassen werden wird. Sie ist kaputt, beschädigt. Erst als in den Tiefen der Anstalt ein verheerendes Feuer ausbricht, eröffnet sich ihr und Hatcher ein Weg in die Freiheit. Aber sie sind nicht die einzigen, die den Flammen entkommen. Das Feuer befreit eine entsetzliche Kreatur, die hungrig und wahllos tötet. Alice und Hatcher müssen sie aufhalten. Sie steigen in die dunkelsten, gefährlichsten Orte der Altstadt hinab, doch je näher sie ihrem Ziel kommen, desto näher kommen sie auch der Wahrheit über Alice‘ Vergangenheit – und dem Mann, der sie noch immer als sein Eigentum betrachtet…

 

Von Christina Henry dürfen sich alle Autor_innen von Adaptionen gern eine Scheibe abschneiden. „Alice“ ist eine hervorragende, hypnotische Variante des Klassikers von Lewis Carroll. Obwohl ich ursprünglich nicht erwartet hatte, eine Handlung vorzufinden, die Alice‘ Schicksal nach ihren Abenteuern beleuchtet, sondern annahm, ich müsste herausfinden, ob sie sich das Wunderland lediglich eingebildet hatte, konnte ich mich sehr schnell darauf einlassen. Die Frage, was mit Alice nach ihrer Rückkehr geschehen wäre, beschäftigt mich, seit ich alt genug bin, darüber zu spekulieren. Es erscheint mir nicht unwahrscheinlich, dass sie in einer psychiatrischen Anstalt gelandet wäre, denn wer hätte ihr ihre verrückte Geschichte schon geglaubt? Henrys Version ist deutlich düsterer, blutiger und gewalttätiger, als ich es mir jemals ausgemalt hätte, doch denke ich an das Original zurück, muss ich zugeben, dass es sich dabei ebenfalls nicht um ein unschuldiges Kinderbuch handelt, schaut man genau hin. Auch in Carrolls Wunderland brodelte das Potential der Gewalt meinem Empfinden nach stets nur knapp unter der Oberfläche. Deshalb finde ich „Alice“ großartig: Christina Henry erfasst das Wesen der ursprünglichen Geschichte pointiert und charakterisiert die Figuren exakt so, wie ich sie immer wahrgenommen hatte. Niemand ist Alice ausschließlich wohlgesinnt; sie sind alle sehr ambivalent, hinterlistig und maximal bedingt vertrauenswürdig, nämlich so lange, wie es ihren Zielen entspricht. Henry übertrug diese zwielichtige Ausstrahlung perfekt auf ihre Adaption, sodass ihr Roman authentisch und originell gelang. Sie entwickelte ein fiktives, vage fantastisches Setting, dessen sonderbare Atmosphäre alle Elemente, die nicht rational erklärbar sind, elegant legitimiert und in dessen Rahmen ihre ältere, traumatisierte Alice grob der Reise von Carrolls Heldin folgt. Nominell besteht ihre Aufgabe darin, die Kreatur zu besiegen, die durch das Feuer in der Anstalt befreit wurde, in der sie 10 lange Jahre einsaß. Ich vergaß jedoch immer wieder, dass dies der Kern der Handlung ist, weil die Konfrontationen mit den bekannten, nun aber menschlichen Figuren des Wunderlands wesentlich drängender und präsenter waren und darüber hinaus von Alice‘ persönlicher Entwicklung überstrahlt wurde. Alice ist 26 Jahre alt und verbrachte den Großteil ihrer Jugend in der Psychiatrie. Es gefiel mir ausnehmend gut, wie psychologisch glaubwürdig Henry ihre Protagonistin beschreibt, indem sie einkalkuliert, dass sie die normalen Erfahrungen des Erwachsenwerdens verpasste. Erst im Verlauf ihres Abenteuers entfaltet sie sich und findet heraus, was in ihr steckt – Courage, Loyalität und Entschlossenheit. Ich empfinde „Alice“ daher als verspätete Coming-of-Age-Geschichte, in der der Weg das Ziel ist und es nicht überraschen sollte, dass der Kampf gegen das Monster eher hintergründig von Bedeutung ist. Resultierend daraus gestaltet sich der finale, äußerst feminine Showdown recht unspektakulär, weil dieser die logische Konsequenz von Alice‘ Metamorphose darstellt. Sie durchlebte eine klassische Heldenreise; sobald sie fähig ist, ihr Schicksal und sich selbst zu akzeptieren, werden alle Herausforderungen zum Kinderspiel.

 

„Alice“ von Christina Henry ist eine dunkle, verdrehte Variante des Kinderbuchklassikers von Lewis Carroll. Es ist eine Adaption, die meinen Geschmack voll und ganz trifft, weil sie meiner intuitiven Wahrnehmung des Originals Form verleiht und diese auf Papier bannt. Die Autorin erfasst die inhärente Natur und Bedeutung der ikonischen Geschichte zielsicher und transformiert diese in eine Erzählung, die neu und frisch wirkt und dennoch das Charisma, die unverwechselbare Aura des populären Stoffes aufgreift. Wer die eigenen Kindheitserinnerungen an „Alice im Wunderland“ unangetastet lassen möchte oder sensibel auf gewaltsame Szenen reagiert, sollte von der Lektüre eher Abstand nehmen, doch allen Leser_innen, die eine erwachsene, erwachte Alice kennenlernen möchten, kann ich das Buch wärmstens empfehlen. Ich freue mich auf die Fortsetzung „Red Queen“ und nehme Anlauf für einen weiteren Sturz durch das Kaninchenloch.

Source: wortmagieblog.wordpress.com/2019/04/25/christina-henry-alice
Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
review 2016-02-18 12:10
Mam'zelle Guillotine
Mam'zelle Guillotine (Scarlet Pimpernel) - Baroness Emma Orczy

This book, seventh in the series chronologically, was first published around 1940. By then Orczy had apparently forgotten her own Pimpernel timeline, especially as it pertained to books written prior to 1920, as she makes mention of an adventure that hasn't happened yet and claims Lord Tony is among the single members of the Pimpernel's band. Not that I mind the thought of my darling Lord Tony being single again, but that's small consolation to my inner pedant.

 

Mam'zelle Guillotine features a female villain, who of course wears breeches and is built like a man and is as proficient an executioner as the Republic could hope for. I kind of wanted a female Chauvelin, all cunning and suave and silky. What I got was a cartoonish harridan with all the subtlety of a boot to the head. Which isn't all that surprising, really, and it also wasn't nearly as disappointing as the Pimpernel's own performance.

 

This is the book where we find out how low our intrepid hero is willing to go to achieve his aims. And it's pretty darn low. I lost a little respect for him. Not that I felt sorry for the villain, but . . . blech. It's my least favorite Pimpernel adventure so far, and I think I need to take a break from them for a while.

 

Oh, and while reading this book it's very important to note that back in the day, to "make love" to someone meant to woo them. Very important.

Like Reblog Comment
review 2015-10-22 14:24
Paisley Memories
Paisley Memories: The Beginning of Me - Zelle Andrews

She wore the labels that she was given when her life started to go in reverse. With no one pushing her forward now, Tess bundled up Paisley and wandered the Deep South. Tess wasn’t exactly sure what she was searching for but a year later with her pockets nearly empty she found a stop in Panacea. An opportunity to rest, a place to pad her pockets and just unwind, it made the invitation to stay something she couldn’t pass up. It was a free place to stay, good home-cooked meals, an opportunity to actually have a bath and she could let her two-year old daughter Paisley stretch out her feet instead of living their lives in a hotel room or her father’s car. Tess knew her way around a camera, a skill she acquired in high school but now Butterball was going to teach her some tricks of her trade so when she was recovering from surgery Tess would be her backup for this was the exchange the two of them agreed to. Living with Butterball, emerging into Butterball’s life and the small community around her was perfect for Tess and Paisley. The stars aligned and everything fell into place for all the characters, it was as if Tess was a long-lost relative of Butterball’s.  Being eloped into the community I expected more protective behavior from Tess. Tess was a young teen with a daughter who for the past year had been traveling alone with her on the road, a daughter with special needs and now when she moves into the community, her behavior was not what I expected.   At the beginning of the novel, she was emotional about her situation and further into the novel, her emotions seemed to fall away and became softer. Tess seemed more concerned about herself then she did her own child. She lost me; I cared more about the other characters in the novel and their attachment to Paisley and Tess. This was a happy emotional read, a perfect novel.

I received this novel from NetGalley and Southern Yellow Pine in exchange for an honest review.

Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
text 2015-09-15 16:36
Rapunzel Themed Romance Novels
Zelle and the Tower (Fairelle Book 3) - Rebekah R. Ganiere
Tarnished Knight - Shiloh Walker
Rapunzel in New York - Nikki Logan
The Chocolate Kiss (Chocolate, #2) - Laura Florand
Golden Stair - Jennifer Blackstream
Cress - Marissa Meyer
Rapunzel (Modern Wicked Fairy Tales) - Selena Kitt
Braided Silk - Ella Drake
The Crystal Heart - Sophie Masson
Golden: A Retelling of "Rapunzel" - Cameron Dokey,Mahlon F. Craft

In mood to let you hair down? It is only Tuesday and I want to climb out the window!

 

Enjoy these Rapunzel Themed Romance Novels

 

My lists are never in any particular order.

 

1. Zelle and the Tower by Rrebekah R. Ganiere

 

Sweet and naïve Rapunzelle possesses a dangerous and powerful magick. Her entire life has been spent in a mage tower built by her father, to keep her safe. Or so she's been told. Flint Gwyn has spent the better part of the last year wandering Fairelle, wanting nothing more than to wash away the pain of letting his family down. Between drinking and womanizing he plummets in to despair, with only Dax the werebear to keep him from getting himself killed. When Flint and Dax stumble into Zelle's tower while running from a dragon, she finds herself drawn to him in a way that awakens startling memories she cannot place. And the longer he stays, the closer she comes to losing her heart. Unable to control his feelings for the lonely maiden who brings him peace for the first time in his life, Flint fights to release her from her prison. But in doing so, he may very well bring down the wrath of an evil that's plagued Fairelle for a hundred years.

 

2. Tarnished Knight by Shiloh Walker

 

ne look at Jack Wallace and Perci knows he’s going to be trouble. Even surrounded by soul stealers, he’s a one-man wrecking crew. What does he need Grimm training for? He’s already hell on earth, a warrior bent on destruction. And something…more

He’s too strong and fast to be a mere mortal. Even covered in blood, he makes her forget she’s only here to do a job and get out. It’s twisted. Sick. She hasn’t felt this alive in three centuries.

 

Born with a natural talent for killing unnatural things, Jack has always known things he shouldn’t. The fact that Perci is one of them glows all over her. Giving him an unholy urge to see just how far he can push her before don’t touch me melts into touch me there.

When they come together, it isn’t careful or cautious. It’s heaven and hell, exposing all their raw and wounded places to healing heat, resurrecting memories of a destined love from the distant past. But the evil that destroyed them once before has tracked them here, threatening their second and last chance at forever. Demanding a sacrifice no one—Grimm or human—should ever be asked to make…

 

3. Rapunzel in New York by Nikki Logan

 

Galloping up a crumbling tower block, he crashed into the chamber where she was imprisoned! The Maiden gasped and said – that she was perfectly happy, thank you very much, and certainly didn’t need saving, especially by a smug, designer-suited billionaire, and why had he just kicked in her front door?

It’s sometimes hard for a modern damsel in distress to admit she needs rescuing – but at least this heroine plans to rescue her hero right back!

 

4. The Chocolate Kiss by Laura Florand

 

The Heart of Paris

Welcome to La Maison des Sorcieres. Where the window display is an enchanted forest of sweets, a collection of conical hats delights the eye and the habitués nibble chocolate witches from fanciful mismatched china. While in their tiny blue kitchen, Magalie Chaudron and her two aunts stir wishes into bubbling pots of heavenly chocolat chaud.

But no amount of wishing will rid them of interloper Philippe Lyonais, who has the gall to open one of his world famous pastry shops right down the street. Philippe's creations seem to hold a magic of their own, drawing crowds of beautiful women to their little isle amidst the Seine, and tempting even Magalie to venture out of her ivory tower and take a chance, a taste. . .a kiss. 

 

Parisian princesses, chocolate witches, pâtissier princes and sweet wishes--an enchanting tale of amour et chocolat.

 

5. Golden Stair by Jennifer Blackstream

 

A devil-may-care incubus with a ravenous appetite . . . 

Adonis is a demon prince determined to bury his desire for love in the pleasures of the flesh. Bound by a vow to maintain his physical form, Adonis requires a great deal of energy just to live, energy he can only absorb through the carnal arts…more energy than any one woman could ever provide. Adonis knows he could never offer a woman the fidelity she would deserve as his wife, and so carries on with his wild ways, his cryptic smile hidden behind a puff of smoke. No woman can reach beyond the heat of his embrace to touch his heart. Not even the golden-haired maid whose lonely eyes keep wooing him back to her side. 

A damsel in distress with the power to destroy him . . . 

Ivy has lived in a tower, locked away from the rest of the world, for her entire life. Her mother, a witch who leads the resistance against the bloodthirsty kings of the five kingdoms, is her only company. Ivy knows that her battle-weary mother relies on the golden power flowing through her veins for the energy to continue the good fight, but she can’t completely smother the selfish yearning to see the world beyond the safety of their hidden valley…especially when her wildest fantasy almost literally falls into her lap. Despite their best intentions, they’re drawn together like phoenixes to flame—and if they’re not careful, they’ll both burn. 

An incubus can only deny his nature for so long . . . 

Long golden hair. A tower with no stairs. A witch with serious possession issues. Debilitating blindness. None of these are enough to keep a demon from climbing…the Golden Stair. 

 

6. Cress by Marissa Meyer

 

Cinder and Captain Thorne are fugitives on the run, now with Scarlet and Wolf in tow. Together, they're plotting to overthrow Queen Levana and prevent her army from invading Earth.

 

Their best hope lies with Cress, a girl trapped on a satellite since childhood who's only ever had her netscreens as company. All that screen time has made Cress an excellent hacker. Unfortunately, she's being forced to work for Queen Levana, and she's just received orders to track down Cinder and her handsome accomplice. 

 

When a daring rescue of Cress goes awry, the group is splintered. Cress finally has her freedom, but it comes at a higher price than she'd ever expected. Meanwhile, Queen Levana will let nothing prevent her marriage to Emperor Kai, especially the cyborg mechanic. Cress, Scarlet, and Cinder may not have signed up to save the world, but they may be the only hope the world has.

 

7. Rapunzel by Selena Kitt

 

Rachel runs Rapunzel’s, a high-end salon on the lower level of a downtown Chicago high rise and lives happily in self-imposed exile in an apartment at the top of the tower—that is until Jake Malden walks in with his teen daughter, Emma, and presents Rachel with a dilemma. 

Young Emma is determined to defy her mother’s wishes and get her long, beautiful, untouched hair cut off so she can donate it to charity to honor a friend with cancer. 

Rachel’s decision to cut the girl’s hair starts a snowball of drama, turmoil and hidden secrets rolling downhill on a course with destiny that no one is able to stop, one that ultimately threatens not only Rachel’s livelihood, but her slowly melting heart as well. 

 

8. Braided Silk by Ella Drake

 

Rapunzel was made with technologically advanced hair. As a trained Mother agent, Zel can't escape the DNA that makes her a pawn in corporate espionage. Kidnapped and held in a tower on Gothel Island, she falls to the sexual allure of her captor’s son, Langley, a man whose every tantalizing touch makes her forget she wasn’t born human. 

Langley Gothel protests the existence of creations such as Zel, but when faced with losing her, he sees the truth: Life is precious, whether born, modified, or shaped in a Petri dish. He does the one thing he's thought he'd never do. He has to give up Zel, or become a mod. But will that be enough to get them down from the floating islands and safely to ground?

 

9. The Crystal Heart by Sophie Masson

 

 girl in a tower. An underground kingdom. A crystal heart split in two, symbolising true love lost . . . 

When Kasper joins the elite guard watching over a dangerous prisoner in a tower, he believes he is protecting his country from a powerful witch.  

Until one day he discovers the prisoner is a beautiful princess - Izolda of Night- who is condemned by a prophecy to die on her eighteenth birthday. Kasper decides to help her escape. But their hiding place won't remain secret forever. 

Will they find their happily ever after?

 

10. Golden by Cameron Dokey

 

efore Rapunzel's birth, her mother made a dangerous deal with the sorceress Melisande: If she could not love newborn Rapunzel just as she appeared, she would surrender the child to Melisande. When Rapunzel was born completely bald and without hope of ever growing hair, her horrified mother sent her away with the sorceress to an uncertain future. 

After sixteen years of raising Rapunzel as her own child, Melisande reveals that she has another daughter, Rue, who was cursed by a wizard years ago and needs Rapunzel's help. Rue and Rapunzel have precisely "two nights and the day that falls between" to break the enchantment. But bitterness and envy come between the girls, and if they fail to work together, Rue will remain cursed...forever.

 

Vote on my Goodreads list so the best retelling win: Rapunzel Themed Romance Novels 

Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
review 2015-06-09 23:45
Review - Zelle and the Tower by Rebekah Ganiere (Fairelle #3)
Zelle and the Tower (Fairelle Book 3) - Rebekah R. Ganiere

My Thoughts - 4 out of 5 Unicorns - I really liked it!!!

 

The cover is unique and the classic style, but she just looks way too thin…like scary thin.

 

This is book 3 in the series.  It is for adults only due to the steamy scenes and violence.  I recommend reading the series in order so you can have the benefit of knowing and understanding each character better, but it is not required.

 

I really enjoyed this book, but Flint is not my favorite Gwyn brother or character.  I just want to slap him for the way he acts.  I think if I would have liked him more, I would have loved this book, but he just irritated me.  Zelle is strong, caring, and been through some stuff.  She has to worry about who she is and more as the story goes. 

 

I love the world of Fairelle and can’t wait to read more.  Rebekah does a fantastic job with her descriptions and the complex stories that are all weaving together into the fantastic world that is Fairelle.  I’m not sure how long I have to wait for book 4, but I’ll be looking for it :)

 

I recommend this series to all those readers who love all the new fairy tale twists that have become popular lately especially if you like daemons, vampires, werewolves, fae, and more from the paranormal :)

More posts
Your Dashboard view:
Need help?