Girl, Serpent, Thorn

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Product Details

Price
$18.99  $17.66
Publisher
Flatiron Books
Publish Date
Pages
336
Dimensions
6.3 X 9.5 X 1.1 inches | 1.1 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781250196149

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About the Author

Melissa Bashardoust received her degree in English from the University of California, Berkeley, where she rediscovered her love for creative writing, children's literature, and fairy tales and their retellings. She currently lives in Southern California with a cat named Alice and more copies of Jane Eyre than she probably needs. Melissa is the author of Girls Made of Snow and Glass and Girl, Serpent, Thorn.

Reviews

Named a must-read book of the year by BookPage, BuzzFeed, Bustle, Harper's Bazaar, Hypable, The Nerd Daily, and more!

Junior Library Guild Selection

"Bashardoust again draws elements from multiple folkloric and literary precursors for a relationship-driven tale in which sexual undertones are no less intense for being kept between the lines. Along with the influences that the author cites in a detailed afterword, alert readers will spot nods to other classics such as Beauty and the Beast and Rapunzel as events whirl to a climatic close amid cascades of poisoned thorns, just deserts, and self-acceptance. Surefire for readers fond of princesses capable of embracing actual demons as well as the inner sort." --SLJ, starred review

"A captivating queer fairy tale." --Harper's Bazaar

"A lovely entwining of Persian culture and myth with well-known fairy tales. One of the best books of the year, hands down." --BuzzFeed

"Bashardoust's exceptional attention to folktale structure and Soraya's hard-won acceptance of herself make for a lyrical, inspiring read." --Publishers Weekly

"This morally complex biromantic heroine's quest for identity, with support from strong female allies, is an alluring feminist fairy tale." --Kirkus Reviews

"Girl, Serpent, Thorn is a deliciously lush fairy tale of a novel. I was swept away by Bashardoust's prose and found myself losing track of time as I read, turning every page, sinking into her magnificent world, wishing it would never end. At its heart, it's a book about a girl who may be monstrous claiming her own power, filled with twists and a fascinating queer romance that stole my own heart." --Patrice Caldwell, editor of A Phoenix First Must Burn: Sixteen Stories of Black Girl Magic, Resistance, and Hope

"Gorgeously written and quietly powerful, Bashardoust's latest is an enthralling tale of family, monsters, and the things we do for love." --S. A. Chakraborty, author of City of Brass

"Every passage is a fine cut gem, each facet brilliantly rendered to create a stunningly crafted fairytale about a girl and monsters and a girl who is also a monster. I truly loved this book." --Emily Duncan, author of Wicked Saints

"This is a gorgeously written book set in a beautiful and dangerous world. I loved the vividness of the story, and the way Bashardoust makes stories matter in this book. I was captivated from the beginning, and absolutely thrilled with the end. Watching Soraya come into her own as a character was a delight." --Kat Howard, author of An Unkindness of Magicians

"The queer, good-monster book of my dreams. I loved this heroine with my entire soul." --E. K. Johnston, author of Star Wars Queen's Shadow

"Monstrously beautiful and enchanting, Girl, Serpent, Thorn is a fairytale for anyone who has ever feared the poison in their own heart. I loved this queer, subversive, lyrical and deeply affirming book." --Tasha Suri, author of Empire of Sand

"Girl, Serpent, Thorn is a tale a rose might tell, lushly perfumed and lined with thorns in all the right places. With complex women, Persian demons, a gorgeously twisting narrative, and the age-old question of what it means to be a monster, it had me eagerly flipping pages until the very end. I only wish there were more!" --Shveta Thakrar, author of Star Daughter

"Like a jeweled fairy tale, Girl, Serpent, Thorn glitters with twisty revelations, curses and dangerous transformations, magic and monsters and love--and at its heart, a girl who can kill with a touch. A thrilling, moving story of what it means to come into one's own power, this book is utterly captivating." --Gita Trelease, author of Enchantée

Praise for Girls Made of Snow and Glass

Booklist Top 10 First Novel for Youth
ALA's Amelia Bloomer List for Feminist Literature
ALA's Best Fiction for Young Adults List
Junior Library Guild Selection

"This beautifully wrought novel offers plenty of fairy-tale wonder, but Bashardoust resists the most common tropes; instead, she tells a story where women save each other with their own ingenuity, bravery, and love, and power and compassion can exist hand in hand. Compellingly flawed characters, vivid world-building, and pitch-perfect pacing make this utterly superb." --Booklist, starred review

"An empowering novel with strong, three-dimensional female protagonists who refuse to let jealousy and power break their bond. Filled with magic, adventure, and interesting characters, this debut will keep readers thoroughly engaged. A refreshing and progressive original retelling. Highly recommended." --SLJ, starred review

"Magic, mother-daughter conflict, and the quest for self-identity are given a dark and fantastical treatment in this chilling feminist adaptation of the Snow White fairy tale. A hauntingly evocative adaptation that stands on its own merits." --Kirkus Reviews, starred review

"If you thought you were done with the re-imagined fairy tale trope, suspend your moratorium for Girls Made of Snow and Glass: Melissa Bashardoust has created a story more The Bloody Chamber than damsel-in-distress fable." --Bustle

"This is Snow White as it's never been told before. Fans of Game of Thrones will relish the loyalties and betrayals; with elements of the medieval legend of the golem, echoes of the movie Frozen, and plenty of magic, Girls Made of Snow and Glass is a feminist fantasy not to be missed." --BookPage

"A gripping, dark, and ultimately heart-affirming retelling of the rivalry between Snow White and her wicked queen, but this time that wickedness is a wild longing--in both women--to be loved and seen for who they really are. These are fairy tales the way they're supposed to be--full of horror and doubt, with the actualization of the heroines always shining at the center, sharp as glass." --Blackbird