8th November 2007

Once Upon a Marigold

Once Upon a Marigold by Jean Ferris (hardcover 2002, softcover 2004)

Once Upon A Marigold Book CoverOnce upon a Marigold there lived a cursed princess, an evil queen, an eccentric troll, and a handsome foster son of the troll. Subtitled “Part comedy, part love story, part everything-but-the-kitchen-sink,” Once Upon a Marigold is all parts a light-hearted, fun read. Princess Marigold has an independent spirit and refuses to tolerate the unwelcome suitors her evil queen mother sends her way. Instead, Marigold wishes to marry for love and to take an active part in ruling her kingdom.

Speaking of love, Marigold’s plight does not go unnoticed by Christian, the young man living across the river with his foster father the troll Edric (Ed for short). Christian’s past is mysterious (albeit somewhat predictable), since he ran away from home and was adopted by Ed when he was but a young lad of six. Christian and Marigold begin with p-mail (pigeon mail) and their seemingly improbable commoner-princess relationship blossoms into full-fledged love.

Just to be near Marigold, Christian finds menial work at the castle. At first he doesn’t tell Marigold that he is her p-mail pal, but he changes his mind when he overhears her evil mother discussing yet another evil plot. Through a series of misfortunes and adventures and the use of his inventor’s prowess, he wins the princess and defeats the evil stepmother.

Replete with awful jokes, a humorous plot, magical creatures (including a single-minded troll bent on breaking up the monopoly of the overworked, ineffectual tooth fairy), a smattering of Greek mythology, and many a time-tested fairy tale convention, Once Upon a Marigold holds its own in the realm of comedic fairy tale lore and will particularly appeal to young girls who dream that someday their prince will come (and possibly to young boys who don’t mind the romance thrown in with the troll-talk and invention action).

The end is apparent from the beginning, and I personally found the tale to be a little too predictable. Still, readers (myself included) will likely continue to turn pages just to make sure Marigold and Christian do indeed find true love and that Ed commences his part of the tooth fairy enterprise (and also so as not to miss out on any awful jokes) .

posted in fantasy, myths/fairy tales, young adult, book review, children's literature | 0 Comments

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