Bryony and Roses

Paperback, 222 pages

Published Nov. 14, 2017 by Argyll Productions.

ISBN:
978-1-61450-404-7
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(10 reviews)

Bryony and her sisters have come down in the world. Their merchant father died trying to reclaim his fortune and left them to eke out a living in a village far from their home in the city.

But when Bryony is caught in a snowstorm and takes refuge in an abandoned manor, she stumbles into a house full of dark enchantments. Is the Beast that lives there her captor, or a fellow prisoner? Is the house her enemy or her ally? And why are roses blooming out of season in the courtyard?

Armed only with gardening shears and her wits, Bryony must untangle the secrets of the house before she—or the Beast—are swallowed by them.

3 editions

Review of 'Bryony and Roses' on 'Goodreads'

This is a novel-length retelling of the "Beauty and the Beast" fairy tale, thankfully without all the bells and whistles added by the Disney version. Instead, the author mentions this was inspired by McKinley's "Rose Daughter" version, but in this case, the heroine (Bryony) is an avid gardener and uses her wits and her gardening shears to find her way out of the situation in the end. Despite the fundamental setting of the story requiring the beast to capture the girl, in this case he's quite sympathetic; it's clear from the start that he's also being forced into actions beyond his control and he's polite and apologetic and occasionally sarcastic, and while Bryony doesn't exactly volunteer to be captured, she is given about as much control over the situation as reasonably possible given the story's basic framework.

The characters are sympathetic and their banter is often funny and sarcastic and …

Review of 'Bryony and Roses' on 'Goodreads'

Stories of women marrying wild beasts - snakes, bears, or foxes - are fairly common. There are also stories that run the other way: a Papuan story, for example, has a young man marrying a wild pig. Hovering behind these are concerns about marriage, sex and growing away from the family of origin.
The story we have of Beauty and the Beast has been trimmed down to a morality tale about a woman's marrying for the good of her family - a merchant's daughter sacrifices herself to save her recently impoverished father. (I have my own version of a very similar tale, 'East of the Moon and West of the Sun, here : www.tumblr.com/reblog/182868348003/f2ucR0JV) In T Kingfisher's version, however, the impoverished father is dead, and she winds up in the Beast's mansion through her own caprice : a short ride to a friend's house to pick up some rutabaga seeds …

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