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Too Many Fairy Princes (2013)

by Alex Beecroft(Favorite Author)
3.37 of 5 Votes: 3
languge
English
genre
publisher
Samhain Publishing, Ltd.
review 1: This is very enjoyable, quite funny and wildly imaginative. At its heart, it's a story about two lonely men who find each other in highly coincidental (or are they?) circumstances.Joel is wonderful and Kai is a wonder. They take ages to get together, but all the way through their love is there.The dialogue is clever, the situations they get themselves into hilarious and there's nothing like the Queen of England to ensure we are on a crazy ride.
review 2: The title of Alex Beecroft's book, "Too Many Fairy Princes," doesn't really quite do it justice. It is too elegant, too delicately wrought, its emotions too genuinely felt, to be classed as a farce, which is what I think the title suggests. Maybe the author, who is a really wonderful writer, thought it would h
... moreelp sell it. To be truthful, there is farce here, but it is more like a surreal comedy of manners, because the worlds of Kjartan and Joel are so different, their worldviews so completely alien to each other (at first), that it cannot help but make you laugh. But what struck me in reading this book was the wonderful sense of observation - the careful way the author makes us feel we are seeing something actually happen - the strangeness of Joe's discovery of a clearly magical creature right out of Tolkien collapsed behind his trash bins. The strangeness that Kjarten feels while experiencing reactions to this bumbling, awkward human that shouldn't even exist according to his training and his station. Beecroft offers some of the most beautifully crafted narrative in the m/m genre, bringing in the paranormal/magical aspects of the tale as if she was an anthropologist studying an isolated tribe (which, of course, she is). And she doesn't make everything neat and tidy - we get the world of elves as it is, a mixture opulence and hatefulness. She lets us see Joel through Kjartan's eyes, and vice versa, and lets us feel what they feel with a gentle touch that traps us in the ultimate, crystalline truth of this fairy tale - that love is transformative, powerful, destructive, and potentially redemptive. And, beyond all belief, HM Queen Elizabeth II appears, and it totally makes sense. Read it, you'll see. less
Reviews (see all)
Gwise_89
That was a surprise story, great mixture of contemporary fantasy. I loved the queen !
ellieholt
I really enjoyed this book, it's so different to anything else I've read.
AKOIJAM
Loved the first 60% or so. Ending went a little off for me.
Erza626
A beautiful, surprisingly complex treat.
cassiecasi
3.5 stars
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