Cover Image: Briar and Rose and Jack

Briar and Rose and Jack

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Member Reviews

Briar and Rose and Jack is a mangled retelling of Jack and the Beanstalk, Sleeping Beauty, and Beauty and the Beast? Briar and Rose are twins, but Briar is ugly and Rose is beautiful. (One thing that bothered me is how it opens up with their mother, the queen focused on "creating something beautiful" by giving birth. NO.) Their parents decide that they can't let it out that they had an ugly baby so announce that Rose is the heir and Briar is a ward. This is really gross. They spend Briar's entire childhood ignoring her and letting her be abused by the rest of the kingdom. She is beaten by the bishop and the king's response is that she needs to not attract his attention. The only love she gets is from Rose, the kennel dogs and her fairy godmother. The only thing that makes Briar special is the gifts her fairy godmother finagled for her (by switching her with Rose during the Sleeping Beauty fairy scene). (Of course, the only thing that makes Rose special is that she's pretty soooo....) <spoiler> Even Jack, who is supposed to be in love with Briar only falls in love with her because of the fairy's gifts of dance and song.</spoiler>
The story is also told in third person present tense, which was not a good fit at all. Katherine Coville uses awkward language that is stilted and the vocab is way out of place for a middle grade book. Phrases that would fit in a high school textbook appear sprinkled throughout what is supposed to be a fun fantasy.
I did like the premise, and the team of children who band together to problem solve an issue that the adults seem to be ignoring, but it was not well executed.

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Lush vocabulary and likable characters people this fairy tale retelling which twists together Sleeping beauty and Jack and the Beanstack - with its own original material. Written for middle grade readers, but carrying a somewhat advanced vocabulary, this will be a perfect read for strong readers.

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This was a wonderful mashup of two beloved fairytales. There were enough new elements to the story to make it fresh while keeping enough of the original tales to be familiar. The two stories were melded together seamlessly. This is a great read for kids that are looking for fantasy.

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Just loved this book. At first I thought it was another same old same old story, boy was I was wrong. This tale is a great read for 10 year olds and older. The younger ones will love the story and older readers will enjoy the complexity. Anther great thing is that is is great for boys and girls. The main characters are girls but the male characters add to the story.

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I’m disappointed in how much the author tells us, sometimes repetitively, about the character’s motivations — for example, the Bishop we are told more than once has lost the values of love and compassion of his religion. It would be better for us as readers (and better writing) for the author to show us so we can make the inference ourselves. Not to mention, the whole plot is too predictable for my liking.

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I don't think this is going to go over well with the intended audience. It starts out too slow, the vocabulary is way too high for the audience, and personally, I couldn't wait to be finished reading. Not in a 'it's so good, I can't stop', but in a 'is this ever going to end' sort of way. The story was interesting, but not told in an appealing way.

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Briar and Rose and Jack is a really interesting retelling/combination of Sleeping Beauty and Jack and the Beanstalk. Based on the cover I wasn't expecting it to be quite what it was but I was pleasantly surprised by this and not disappointed. All in all a fun middle grades read that offers something a bit different than the classic fairy tale fare.

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<i>Briar and Rose and Jack</i> by Katherine Coville was not what I expected. It was <i>much</i> better. When you pick up a middlegrade novel, I feel like you have certain developed expectations for how the novel is going to be, but <i>Briar and Rose and Jack</i> surprised me. A lot. And as much as I love the cover here, I don't quite think that it does itself justice. I feel as though it really leaves you with ideas about the book prior to reading it that just don't actually come true. Admittedly, this is entirely based on my own expectations about the novel, but at the end of the day the book I read was not the one I had pictured I would be reading and I'm actually pretty glad for it.

The first thing that surprised me about this book was not that it was written in present tense, but rather that the present tense itself didn't bother me in the slightest. I've always been rather against books that are written in present tense, so much so that I almost always rate them lower. And despite the fact that I've almost always found present tense massively annoying, I barely noticed it at all while reading this book. Next was the fact that this novel is middlegrade as there were a great many words that even I didn't know the definition of, let alone a young kid. The reading level is definitely more advanced for the age that it's written for.

The story follows the lives of twin sisters Briar and Rose from their birth, where Briar is immediately cast out and disowned at the urging of a vicious priest, to the time of their sixteenth birthday where the curse cast on the infant children for the slight of not having extended an invitation to the grey fairy. In a kingdom plagued by a selfish and angry giant who comes down from the mountain and regularly smashes a hole in the castle wall as he demands gold and destroys the homes of the peasants and a villainous bishop whispering lies to the king and the people while harboring an extra special hatred for young Briar, the two young Princesses grow up in a world with plenty of injustices.

Among them lies the injustice of poor Briar being disowned and mistreated. Both Briar and Rose have no knowledge of their relation, though they grow up exceedingly close. It is in this portion of the novel that I find the book was most difficult to read as there are unfortunate incidents in which Briar is described as being "beaten" by the bishop. This was the most uncomfortable portion of the book for me because, despite being about a fictional world in a time period where such treatments were unfortunately acceptable, it didn't sit well with me.

But overall, the story was thoroughly engaging and the characters were wonderful in so many ways. I found myself invested in their stories almost instantly, eager to learn where the story was going and how the problems would all be solved. The girls end up forming a secret Giant Killers club with a young boy called Jack whom they meet on an adventure into the woods. This club slowly branches out to include some of the nobles' children who live in the palace and a great many of the young kids from the village outside the castle and the rest of the kingdom.

I've always loved retellings and I found it especially fun to read this one, a mix of <i>Sleeping Beauty</i> and <i>Jack and the Beanstalk</i> blended more beautifully than I could have imagined up on my own. I was thoroughly pleased and impressed with the ending, to the point that I definitely want to get a physical copy of this one as soon as I can. Seeing as it wont be out until around summer of next year, that'll probably be a while. <i>Briar an Jack and Rose</i> is definitely a book to have on your radar, just keep in mind if you're giving this to a young reader that they might not know all the words.

<i>I was provided a free copy of this book via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.</i>

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There's nothing inherently wrong with this book, it just wasn't what I was looking for (I originally thought it might be f/f but Briar and Rose are twin sisters). I love MG fairy tales but this is definitely the younger end of the spectrum- the characters are 9 years old. I also didn't care for the tense of the writing, third person present. It felt awkward to me. But the characters were charming and got up to lots of mischief and adventures, so I think young readers will enjoy this.

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