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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Borrow, don't buy.,
This review is from: Ellie and the Elven King (Hardcover)
I'm very glad I did not purchase this book, and instead borrowed it on interlibrary loan through my public library. The painted photographs are a unique way to illustrate a story, and Valdemar is a strikingly handsome man, but the lack of substance in the plot and the two-dimensional characterization detract from true enjoyment of this short story/novella.
8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Beautifully Illustrated Book!,
By
This review is from: Ellie and the Elven King (Hardcover)
Don't pick this book up if you are looking for Ms. Rosburgs typical full length novel. Instead your in for a real treat as far as the beautifully told fairy tale that Ms. Rosburg has managed to pen as well as the trademark Fortin & Sanders amazingly superb illustrations. This book will make an amazing addition to your book collection.Ellie has just lost her sister and is in the process of mourning her when she finds out that she has left her horse farm to Ellie. Ellie's husband George is less then thrilled with their new acquisition and does nothing but complain. Rhiannon has left a letter for Ellie an in this letter she requests that Ellie go and visit the horses like they did after the death of her mother. Ellie smiles for the first time once she remembers that bittersweet memory and posthaste heads out to Rhiannon's place and her beloved horses. While out visiting the mares she experiences something unbelievable and soon finds herself eyeing two very amorous fairies that insist once they realize that Ellie has arrived that she must follow them to their King. King Valdemar is mourning the passing of his sweet Rhiannon and does as she asked and that was to search out for her sister Ellie. He must marry or the lives of all that he rules could come to an end. Thinking that he could/would never love again Valdemar is surprised that the sweet but sassy Ellie stirs feelings in him that he thought were long dead with his beloved. Ellie can't believe that she is in and elven kingdom let alone looking at the man that her sister had loved before she died. What shocks her even more is that Valdemar has just asked her to marry him and she actually thinks about it! Before they can say their "I do's" Ellie must untangle herself from George and both Ellie and Valdemar must come to terms with their loss of Rhiannon. Again this is a short story (less then 90 pages) so the story moves swiftly and is not an overly in-depth story. Still this was a sweetly told story which has made it onto my "keeper shelf".
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointing,
By
This review is from: Ellie and the Elven King (Hardcover)
Elliana Munson believes she is trapped in a loveless marriage to a boorish man in modern-day Great Britain. When her beloved sister, Rhiannon, dies and leaves her a fortune plus a horse farm, Elliana acts out for once in her life and leaves with the couple's only car to fulfill her sister's dying request. All Rhiannon asks Elliana to do is to mourn her the way the two girls had mourned the death of their mother - by laying down in the fields and letting the horse mares come and help take the pain away.
When Elliana awakens, she believes she still slumbers, as the first sight she sees is two lively and lusty fairies, who don't seem the least bit dismayed to be caught 'in the act' as it were. Deciding that she must still be dreaming, Elliana goes along with her make-believe fairies, who lead her into a magical wood, where Valdemar, the Elven King, rules over his subjects and protects the magical horses in his care. Elliana is stunned when Valdemar claims that she is to be his next queen. Sure, he is stunningly handsome and everything she always wished for in a man, but he is an Elf! He is also the saddest man she has ever seen and that is because he mourns the loss of his Queen - Elliana's sister Rhiannon. How can Elliana ever take her beloved sister's place in the Elvish kingdom? And how can she marry another when she is still wed in the mortal realm? I was very excited to read this book as it sounded like such a lovely story and it had some beautiful illustrations, but I was sadly disappointed. The story is very simple and unsatisfactory. Elliana fell in love with Valdemar at first sight and just went along with everything that he said. She had no backbone and was a very simple character, without anything to recommend her. Valdemar was a little more interesting, but mainly because of Fortin & Sanders' lush illustrations of what they imagined him to look like. The illustrations were by far the best part of this book and are very lovely. I must say that I would certainly have enjoyed the book more if I had not paid so much for it. If you have the opportunity to borrow this from the library, you can read it in less than an hour and will forget the story as quickly as you read it.
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