Reviews

Beauty Sleep: A Retelling of Sleeping Beauty by Cameron Dokey

lumos_libros's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

What a surprise! You know most of these books are fairly predictable, which I don't mind, but this one wasn't. Don't get me wrong it's not like a thriller with major twists at every page, but I honestly didn't have everything figured out from the beginning. A totally refreshing change.

Aurore is of course the girl with that golden hair and startling eyes, but she is different apart from that. Though her curse at first is a hindrance, in some weird way it turns into an advantage. She explores as much as she can, and she has her cousin Oswald to thank for that. She learns to start a fire, shear a goat and countless other things that seem "unprincess like". Once she is sixteen havoc starts to ensue upon the kingdom and she knows what she has to do...or at least she thinks she does.

One of the things I enjoyed the most was the host of secondary characters. In fairy tales they tend to play minor roles, but here they certainly stand out more. Go into this like you haven't heard the fairy tale before because in all reality I think it's better than the original Sleeping Beauty. I mean how cool is it to be helpless and asleep for years on end? I can answer that: it's not cool. Dokey defintely knows how to weave a story and make things come full circle. What I like so much about this series that they are light reads, and you know they'll make you smile. This one has to be the most romantic of the fairy tales oddly enough. What I did think was kind of off was how much she told about the ending. I've read a lot of Dokey's other retellings and it's not usually her style. I just wonder what made her do it here. That aside this retelling is one of the most original of the series; a total heart warmer for all those romantics out there.

hannahcramerica's review against another edition

Go to review page

lighthearted fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No

2.0

bookshy's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

I remember loving this series of books about 10 years ago. I still like the comfortable familiarity of the story, And it's a great short read, but I think I would prefer something a little more grown up currently.

raemelle's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

A simple, definitely Young Adult, book. I enjoyed this quick read. A little predictable (both for obvious reasons and not-so-obvious), but while I guessed at most of the ending, there was a significant part that for whatever reason I didn't anticipate. Probably because it's kind of weird, I had already dismissed the possibility out of my head at the beginning.

So other than the kind of weird ending, I enjoyed this retelling of Sleeping Beauty.

bethw1ef0b's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.5

I was enjoying my reread of this until
the whole "my true love is my cousin" thing

danicapage's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

It was cute, but a very light book. I tend to like books that have a little more substance. However, it did depict an interesting light upon one of the classic fairty tales that we have all heard. I read it in a day. It's a cute, easy read that you can read in a short amount of time. If that's your kind of book, then this one is a cute one. Wierd ending, but cute.

nina1117's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Cute!

thepastelnerd's review against another edition

Go to review page

1.0

1.5 stars rounded down. I usually round up, but...

*inhales deeply*

Okay.

So.

I really enjoyed most of the book. The descriptions were nice and fanciful, the characters felt real, the fairytale element was clear even though it was also clear this tale deviated from the core story of sleeping beauty significantly.

Honestly, the writing and editing isn't the best. It was at times vague, repetitive, and/or confusing, but I was still enjoying the story so I thought I'd give it probably 3 stars.

*Spoiler below*

And then....and then Aurore's cousin who she had a strangely close relationship with that I just chalked up to being siblings originally was revealed to be her one true love! He waited for her for 100 years and they get married and have many children! Yay, right?

NO.

I don't care how romantic you write it. Ew. No. I don't care if in the time the book was roughly placed first cousin intimacy was okay. Today, in this society, it is very wrong and very gross. I could have given a pass for like a fourth or fifth cousin that was raised alongside the crown princess, but not a first cousin.

It's even more upsetting because we spend a significant chunk of the book watching her cute budding romance with her fifth-great-nephew or something like that. Still weird, but I was willing to give it a pass because I was still enjoying the book before Aurore decided to commit incest right at the end.

By the way, I read this series as a tween and didn't remember anything about Beauty Sleep until I read it. Now I remember that middle school me was also grossed out. Sigh. Also, the bit about the world falling apart because she hadn't fallen victim to the curse was too dark. It didn't really fit the tone of the rest of the book.

TL;DR: Could have forgiven some of the bad writing in favor of the cute fairytale-ness if it wasn't for the incest at the very end.

utdawson's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

This was a fun retelling of a classic story.

pascaleb's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

I absolutely loved this version of Sleeping Beauty! Very creative.