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The Lady and the Wish - Jill Stengl (Release Day Review!)


Image result for stengl the lady and the wish

Wow.  And again wow.  This was such a fun book.  It’s my favorite fairy tale retelling so far this year… and if you’ve been watching this blog, you know that I’ve been reading a LOT of fairy tales in 2019.

Lady Gillian is a spoiled, selfish, social-media maven who has wandered through several of the previous books in search of a handsome royal husband.  When she receives a proposal of marriage from a random guy with a crazy-looking beard, she turns him down cold.  Unfortunately, it turns out that her father is seriously in debt to Crazy-Beard-Guy’s family and that her father had offered her in marriage to the guy as payment without bothering to tell her.  But she’s not off the hook.  Now she has to go and act as the companion to Crazy-Beard-Guy’s elderly grandmother, whose dementia and mysterious wish-granting magic make a deadly combination.  If Gillian doesn’t learn to let go of her pride, she’s going to lose her sanity.

The Lady and the Wish is the fourth book in Jill Stengl’s Faraway Castle series, a set of fairy tales about a magical modern-world resort where all sorts of fairy tale creatures live, thrive, and make mischief.  Even though it’s the fourth book, I think you could start reading the series here.

High Points

Writing a redemptive arc for a main character is hard to do convincingly, but in this case I was definitely convinced.  Gillian’s slow progress toward compassion makes perfect sense in context.  Although she begins the story as a brat, by the time she’s suffered from a few of Lady B’s crazy wishes, you are definitely rooting for her.  And I appreciated the way she slowly figures out how to deal with and even care for the confused Lady B, whose combination of vulnerability and nastiness reminded me of my own grandmother in her last years.

I’m not sure this is a high point exactly, but Max makes a great villain.  Such a creep!  Knowing that this is a series of fairy tale books does make me wonder, though: is he going to turn out to be Bluebeard?  Or the Beast?  (Probably not the Beast, since maybe the Gamekeeper is the Beast…)

The slow-growing relationship between Gillian and Manny was really solid and fun to read.  It was definitely not instalove, which I appreciated.  Who wouldn’t like a guy who fixes stuff, calms dozens of agitated dogs with a word, has zero cookie-decorating ability, and crosses continents to ensure your safety?

And so

This book wasn’t at all what I expected.  The previous three books mostly take place at Faraway Castle (although Siren & Scholar has some parts that don’t) but in this book we only visit there at the very beginning and end.  The previous three books also have heroines that have magic (… I think Ella has some magic…) and are already pretty nice people, although both Kamoana and Rosa had some stuff to work out.  But Gillian has no magic, has no defenses against magic (which would have been very helpful in this book), and starts out nasty.  Yet I think she’s my favorite heroine so far.  (Yes, I know that I said this about Rosa back when The Rose and the Briar came out.  See review here.)

Cinder Ellie was fun, Siren was smart, Rose and Briar had a wonderful heart.  But Wish is fun AND smart AND full of heart.  More like this please!

Find the book here.
Find Jill Stengl’s website here.

My Faraway Castle Recommended Reading Order

Cinder Ellie (novella)
The Little Siren (novella)
The Siren and the Scholar (book 2)
Ellie and the Prince (book 1)
The Rose and the Briar (book 3)
The Lady and the Wish (book 4)

You can start with Wish if you like, or read Rose as soon as you’ve read Cinder Ellie.  But don’t read Ellie and the Prince without first reading Cinder Ellie, nor read The Siren and the Scholar without first reading The Little Siren.


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