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The Faery Taile Project: Book One
 
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The Faery Taile Project: Book One [Perfect Paperback]

Jim C. Hines (Author), Christopher Kastensmidt (Author), Sonya M. Shannon (Editor), Amy Goodman (Cover Artist) (Illustrator)
2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

November 15, 2008
Is it good to be bad? Or is it bad to be good? This snarky and fun retelling of the classic fairy tale 'Little Red Riding Hood and The Big Bad Wolf' will have you laughing out loud as you turn the pages. The stories are printed opposite one another so that when you finish reading one version of the story, you can turn the book upside down and read the other - each side has its own cover! This book is suitable for a YA audience, but will appeal to older readers as well. There are two sides to every story -- you deserve to read both!

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The Faery Taile Project: Book One + Red Hood's Revenge (PRINCESS NOVELS) + The Mermaid's Madness (PRINCESS NOVELS)
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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Jim C. Hines is the author of the 'Goblin Trilogy' by DAW books and the upcoming 'Stepsister Scheme' also by DAW (Jan 2009). Christopher Kastensmidt is a new author with a novelette, 'The Fortuitous Meeting of Gerard Van Oost and Oludara', to appear in an upcoming issue of Realms of Fantasy.

Product Details

  • Perfect Paperback: 100 pages
  • Publisher: CatsCurious Press; 1 edition (November 15, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0979088968
  • ISBN-13: 978-0979088964
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.4 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,074,732 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:
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Average Customer Review
2.5 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Clever Little Book, December 6, 2008
This review is from: The Faery Taile Project: Book One (Perfect Paperback)
As the book description above detailed, this novella is actually two 10k word stories bound together with plots that dovetail. On one side, you have "Lobo's Tale," Christopher Kastensmidt's contribution, and on the other "Red's Tale," written by Jim C. Hines.

"Lobo's Tale," (meant to be read first) is a reinterpretation of the classic fairy tale Little Red Riding Hood, casting the wolf in the protagonist's role. It's told from the perspective of Lobo, a middle-aged, pot-bellied wolf who spies a Pretty Young Thing in a red cape at a truck stop. Despite being good-hearted, Lobo is a knuckle-dragging idiot. So, of course, Wacky. Hijinks. Ensue.

"Red's Tale" is the flip side; the same story, but told from Red's POV. I don't want to say any more about this piece because it would spoil too much of this gem of a tale.

While both sides are well-written and very enjoyable, Jim Hines' piece was the stronger one. It might be an unfair distinction for me to make since Mr. Hines is relatively well-established with his Goblin series and his forthcoming "Stepsister Scheme," and Mr. Katsensmidt is a relative newcomer. However, "Red's Tale" was so ridiculously clever it bears mentioning. I cackled constantly while reading it. (Most unbecoming!!)

Two things made me rank this as a four-star book instead of five.

1. Mr. Kastensmidt's story was a four-star story. Still VERY good and a FUN read, but not worth a five-star rating.

2. Mr. Hines' story was occasionally a bit "twee" and cutesy with its constant nods to other fairy tales. It was JUST enough to distract.

Still, I would not hesitate to recommend this book, and have purchased several additional copies to distribute to my writer's group.
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Boring, Ham-fisted, and far too Campy, April 18, 2009
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This review is from: The Faery Taile Project: Book One (Perfect Paperback)
The Faery Taile Project / 978-0-9790889-6-4

This novella is less than 100 pages long, broken into two separate stories, and with a large font size and incredibly wide paragraph spacing.

The first story tells the modern adaptation of the "Red Riding Hood" tale from the point of view of the wolf, Lobo. A bad sign is the opening editor's note cautioning the reader to read Lobo's tale first: in order to make this "dual-story" work, important details were withheld from "Lobo's Tale" so that "Red's Tale" can eventually pack more punch. (I was also astonished at Kastensmidt's opening lines that the Spanish word "lobo" is a common enough name for wolves "down in Mexico" but that it's not common "around these parts"...in *Texas*. Texas! Spanish names, according to Kastensmidt, are not common in Texas. Except, I guess, for cities. And street names. And rivers. And everything else.)

The actual story has almost no meat to it. Lobo falls completely head-over-heels for Red, once he spies her in a diner, on account of her sheer smoking hotness. In an attempt to cast Lobo as a naive innocent patsy, the authors have ham-fistedly overstepped their goal and have made Lobo a complete barking idiot. Though wolf shoes "haven't been invented yet", Red is able to give him the slip with a casual "Shoes untied" statement and, instead of looking at her in confusion, he immediately gapes down at his feet. When Red robs Lobo blind right in front of his very eyes, he is merely confused by the fact that several large bills are now missing from his wallet. This just doesn't work! If they had made Lobo smarter yet more star-struck - perhaps if Lobo realized that of course he'd been robbed, but that poor sweet girl probably had a very good reason and all the more need for him to rescue her - then the set-up might hold the reader more, but as it is it doesn't.

The rest of the tale kills time until the final 38th page. Lobo meets Granny, Lobo eats pork chops at Granny's, Lobo drinks iced tea at Granny's, and so forth - and Lobo notes without suspicion Red's increasingly suspicious behavior, all ham-fistedly designed to make her seem 100% pure evil. When Red asks Lobo to don Granny's nightgown for a kinky sex-game, well, the end is in sight.

Another thing maddening about "Lobo's Tale" is that Kastensmidt uses a minimum of five similes per page. Bad ones, terrible ones, things like: "Thoughts began to bang around my head like a gorilla in a luggage commercial."

"Red's Tale" is theoretically supposed to tell the same tale as "Lobo's Tale" but from Red's sympathetic point of view, but it doesn't. It doesn't "tell the same tale" because pretty much 90% of Red's Tale was deliberately left out of "Lobo's Tale" because they couldn't figure out a way to include it without spoiling the 'twist' at the end. And it doesn't show Red sympathetically because we find that she really is nearly as evil as seen in "Lobo's Tale" and she just has a reason for being evil. "Red's Tale" is almost as boring as "Lobo's Tale", with pages and pages of exposition and inner monologue and very little action to move the story along. The story lumbers to a halt at page 58.

I cannot recommend "The Faery Taile Project" in good conscience to readers. While not a total waste of paper, the book is a huge waste of time, taking a cute concept and utterly killing it with an over-the-top approach that is annoying, and a capacity for cutesy camp that is cloying. Check this out at the library if you must, but I'll bet you'll want your time back afterward.

~ Ana Mardoll
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A disappointment, January 26, 2010
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This review is from: The Faery Taile Project: Book One (Perfect Paperback)
I'm a fan of fairy tales retold and told in modern settings. Therefore I was very eager to read this neo-version of the little red riding hood. Boy was I in for a let-down!
First of all, this one is told twice, told by Lobo the wolf and told by Red. It's a must to start with Lobo's version.

It starts with Lobo falling for Red and following her to Granny. Needless to say neither is anywhere close to the fairy tale version you grew up with, which is good. Yet I was disappointed.
Although the author does a good job working in several fairy tale characters and giving them new occupations, the story itself fails. It's probably supposed to be a fun read. It is not.

Avoid this one.
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