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Angela VanWell

Author | Reader | Traveler | Tea and Coffee Drinker

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Cinderella

Fairytale Retelling: Cinderella and Four Knights

May 7, 2021 by angelavanwell Leave a Comment

I love a fairytale retelling, and thanks to my family, I have another avenue to enjoy them in. K-dramas! The first one I watched, which is how I learned to love Korean media translations of fairytales and folktales, was by watching Cinderella and Four Knights. Eun Ha Won, played by Park So Dam, is the typical Cinderella with an evil stepmother and sister. But that is where the best twist to the tale occurs, she is not waiting to be saved by a knight in shining armour, Eun Ha Won is saving up to go to college and follow her mother’s dream to become a teacher.

Ha-Won works multiple part-time jobs to fulfill her dreams, so when she finds out her family is behind on payments for storage of her mother’s ashes at the cemetery, she is desparate for more money and takes Hyun-Won up on his offer to pretend to be his fiance at his grandfather’s wedding.

I have included the trailer:

As you can see, this Cinderella is peppy with strong ethics, and when the grandfather offers her the job to be the live-in butler to change the way his grandsons live, she takes on the challenge. It’s a fun, heart-warming romantic comedy.

There are lots of cute lines of devotion between Cinderella and her suitors/remediable roommates. I love that she is not taken in by them, but sticks to her ethics and what is important to her.

The glass slipper provided a beautiful metaphor for what is important in life.

There is no magical fairy godmother, just a girl with a great work ethic doing her best to make her mother proud. I like this version of Cinderella, and will enjoy watching the series again:) This was a week filled with Cinderella’s stories and I loved the differences in the new twists. From Cyborgs with Marissa Meyer to a student with an amazing work ethic by Baek Myo, there is always a new interpretation to be enjoyed. That is what I love about fairytales.

I found it on Netflix, but I am sure it is available on other streaming services.

Happy Watching!

Filed Under: Ramblings Tagged With: Cinderella, fairytale retelling, Korean Drama, tv series

Inspiring Author of the Week: Marissa Meyer

May 5, 2021 by angelavanwell Leave a Comment

“She was a cyborg, and she would never go to a ball.”

Marissa Meyer, Cinder

I was hooked with that one line. I love fairytale retellings, but adding Cyborg parts and a Lunar colony? That was all new to me.

Rather than being the first child of her deceased father, he adopted Cinder under mysterious circumstances. Upon her father’s death, her stepmother uses her as labour, to provide income for the family. Unlike the original story where she maintains the house, this time Cinder(ella) is a mechanic, and a great one. It helps that she is part cyborg, so mechanical parts are natural to her nature.

The story takes place in New Beijing, far in the future, where technology is more developed but there remains social class separation and a newly developed class of part cyborgs. I don’t truly understand why people who receive cyborg parts as a medical condition reduces their status, but the story is told from Cinder’s point of view and she experiences the world as a cyborg.

The use of cyborgs in medical trials I found disturbing. More so, that no groups protesting were protesting the experimentation. Even if some of it was voluntary.

I travel in books; it is one reason I love picking up travel guides, historical books, and genre fiction. So I can travel through real and imaginary lands. I intended to travel to New Beijing through Cinder’s journey, but I found the setting details sparse. I would have loved more. Cinder’s job in the market could have been an incredibly detailed escape from her family, relationships develop in micro-communities. But we only saw her dissatisfaction in her life. This is possibly a challenge of book-length and story length. I am happy to read thick books with deep settings, so I look for that in books. Perhaps the series fills out with more details as it progresses.

Cinder is lonely and focused a lot of her internal thoughts on escaping her stepmother and finding her own life.

I liked the beginning of Cinder’s character. She is resourceful and cares about the beings important to her. When she sees a wrong against someone she cares about, she stands up and tries to make a difference. I appreciate her having agency and decide, even with the besotted prince asking her out, she focuses on her goals for a new life. Prince Kai, I wish, was more rounded. He has a lot of potential as a likable character, but I needed more to care about him. But I wasn’t a fan of Romeo in Romeo and Juliet either, I am not a big fan of the fall in love at first look and forget everything else important in their lives.

There are several developed characters all with their secrets, however, as this is a Cinderella retelling, we can match pretty well how they all fall into place. The twists were expected, but I enjoyed them regardless. Reading about a plague during our pandemic probably is why I had trouble immersing myself in the settings and the characters. All I have to do is look online or watch the news and I can see the finger-pointing and anger. The lengths people will go in their pain and fear. Her story was not too far off the mark.

I think it will be worth re-reading this in a couple of years when the pandemic has moved into memory, even as we live our new realities. There are always long-term effects when humanity undergoes duress. Hopefully, we will remember more of our lessons and humanity the next time around. Then I can read Cinder for the escapism instead of an alternated current event.

One last thing, the story does not end. I am not a fan of cliffhangers, so I will not continue reading the series. I purchase a book to read a full story. And it did not meet my needs for a satisfying ending. Regardless, the book series has great potential with more world-building. It is also unique from anything I have read before, and I appreciate that.

So, If you want to try a new take on Cinderella, this might be a good fit for you. You can go buy the series so you will not have to deal with the cliffhanger if they are not your thing.

Filed Under: Inspiring Authors Tagged With: Cinderella, dystopian, fairytale, fairytale retelling, fantasy, Fantasy author

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