Mirror Mirror: A Novel
by Gregory Maguire
|
|
Sign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of Mirror Mirror: A Novel.
discuss this book
friend reviews (0)
To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
other reviews (showing 1-20 of 3698)
recommends it for:
anyone who likes roman history
Erin Gort
Ms. Houseman
H World Lit
5 May 2008
Gregory Maguire
Mirror Mirror
New York: Harper Collins, 2004
280 pp. $16.00
978-0-06-098865-4
The novel “Mirror Mirror” was an immense letdown after reading “Wicked” and “Son of a Witch.” Gregory Maguire is noted for recreating or retelling previously created tales of fantasy. “Mirror Mirror” is the reinvented story of Snow White. Placed in the fantasy tale are Cesare and Lucrezia Borgia, the famous children of Pope. T...more
Ms. Houseman
H World Lit
5 May 2008
Gregory Maguire
Mirror Mirror
New York: Harper Collins, 2004
280 pp. $16.00
978-0-06-098865-4
The novel “Mirror Mirror” was an immense letdown after reading “Wicked” and “Son of a Witch.” Gregory Maguire is noted for recreating or retelling previously created tales of fantasy. “Mirror Mirror” is the reinvented story of Snow White. Placed in the fantasy tale are Cesare and Lucrezia Borgia, the famous children of Pope. T...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in October, 2004
"The eye is always caught by light, but shadows have more to say."
"What child does not feel itself perched at the center of creation?... Small children know the truth that their own existense has caused the world to bloom into being."
"Speaking uses us up, speeds us up. Without prayer, that act of confession for merely existing, one might live forever and not know it."
"Faith is a floor. If you don't work at making it for yourself, you have nothing to...more
"What child does not feel itself perched at the center of creation?... Small children know the truth that their own existense has caused the world to bloom into being."
"Speaking uses us up, speeds us up. Without prayer, that act of confession for merely existing, one might live forever and not know it."
"Faith is a floor. If you don't work at making it for yourself, you have nothing to...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
Do you like Wicked?
Incestuous relationships abound in this revision of Snow White by the famed author of "Wicked." Set in Italy in the 1500s, the heroine is Bianca de Nevada, a motherless girl whose father is asked to set off on a quest to find the Tree of Knowledge from the Garden of Eden by none other than the heir to the poison-loving Borgia family,
The wicked witch in McGuire's revision is Catherine Borgia who sleeps with her father, her brother and her own son/nephew by the end of the book, as ...more
The wicked witch in McGuire's revision is Catherine Borgia who sleeps with her father, her brother and her own son/nephew by the end of the book, as ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Okay, well. Shana and I were at the Used Book Sale at St. Agnes yesterday and she chided me for buying this when I said I'd probably dislike it.
I said I would because I'm not sure anything Maguire does will compare with the freshness, the intrigue and the delight I found in Wicked. Or the quiet painterly tension in Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister, which I liked almost as much.
The gimmick, of course, is getting old. In Mirror, he takes Snow White into the viper's nest of the Borgia fam...more
I said I would because I'm not sure anything Maguire does will compare with the freshness, the intrigue and the delight I found in Wicked. Or the quiet painterly tension in Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister, which I liked almost as much.
The gimmick, of course, is getting old. In Mirror, he takes Snow White into the viper's nest of the Borgia fam...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
add a comment
Read in January, 2005
Don Vicente de Nevada and his daughter Bianca live on a farm at Montefiore, a high hill perched above the valleys of Tuscany and Umbria. The year is 1502. They are happy there, with the old cook Primavera Vecchia and the priest, Fra Ludovico tending to their immediate needs. Little do they know, they are being watched by a small stone figure, a dwarf, when de Nevada pulls an oval mirror from the muck of the nearby lake, and are later followed by the same character…
When the noble Cesare Bor...more
When the noble Cesare Bor...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in January, 2007
Yikes... I read this aloud with my boyfriend after piling on compliments about how much I love McGuire's other novels. A few bedtimes and two long plane rides later and we both hated this book...
Part of the problem was in the fact that I did make this a read aloud. McGuire interspersed his text with a lot of Italian words and when you add that to his sometimes eclectic vocabulary, I was tripping over sentences left and right. Stumbling over the pronunciation of half of the words was sure...more
Part of the problem was in the fact that I did make this a read aloud. McGuire interspersed his text with a lot of Italian words and when you add that to his sometimes eclectic vocabulary, I was tripping over sentences left and right. Stumbling over the pronunciation of half of the words was sure...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in May, 2008
recommends it for:
Italian history freaks, people that enjoy nails on chalkboards
This book would have entertained me better if it had been on fire.
I rarely ever put a book down before I have finished it, no matter how bad it is... but I not only put this book down, I gave it away. The cafe I was reading it at had a collection bin of books to send to the needy in Africa. After forcing myself to read it for several days, I walked right over and tossed it in. Sorry to whoever receives the book, perhaps it will be better than reading nothing, though I doubt it.
Overall the...more
I rarely ever put a book down before I have finished it, no matter how bad it is... but I not only put this book down, I gave it away. The cafe I was reading it at had a collection bin of books to send to the needy in Africa. After forcing myself to read it for several days, I walked right over and tossed it in. Sorry to whoever receives the book, perhaps it will be better than reading nothing, though I doubt it.
Overall the...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
fantasy,
fiction
I had high hopes for Mirror Mirror after reading Maguire’s book Wicked. Sadly, these hopes were dashed into little pieces. In Mirror Mirror, Maguire retells the classic tale of Snow White in the context of the Borgia family of Italy. The requisite fairytale ingredients are present - magic mirror, dwarves, beautiful girl, evil authority figure, random unicorn… But even with these, I was disappointed by the fact that Maguir...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
own,
read-pre-12-07
Read in January, 2004
A fascinating retelling of Snow White. It's always interesting to have fairy tales re-cast in a specific time and place; it seems to dampen, but deepen, the fantastical elements. My only complaint is that I didn't really quite feel I'd engaged with any of the characters; some would offer brief moments where I would be totally engaged, but then the author would shift viewpoint, or the character would disappear from the story for a couple hundred pages (as in the case of the woodsman). While Magui...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
science-fiction
Read in October, 2007
A retelling of Snow White, in the same vein as Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister, only not nearly as good. Confessions' strength was in its characterization and the twists it put on the Cinderella story, the new understanding we got of Cinderella's wicked stepsisters and stepmother. Mirror Mirror was just... not that exciting and I didn't really care about anyone in it. Also, way too much blather about Italian middle age...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
read-may2008
Read in May, 2008
recommends it for:
fans of retold tales.
I find Gregory Maguire's books remarkably readable when I'm not plodding through Wicked or Son of a Witch. This one was his retelling of Snow White, utilizing Lucrezia Borgia as the evil queen, and he was quite successful (though Maguire was able to tap into my own fascination with the Borgias, which began after I was assigned the fami...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Has a copy to sell/swap
—
Read in March, 2008
Not Wicked, never Wicked. The historical (Renaissance/ Borgias family) context was interesting and all the gory psychology behind Snow White was present. The only thing, in my opinion, Maguire is really missing is an actual intriguing story with all the complexity and depth that is present in Wicked. I wanted to know the characters better. They were somewhat flat even Lucrezia Borgia (The Wicked Stepmother.) This was mostly due the the novel's length, I think. You could tell Maguire was trying h...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
I really don't know
First of all, it wasn't terrible. However, the magical, dream-like quality that Maguire tried so hard to accomplish TOTALLY annoyed me! It was so vague and then alternately literal, then would slip into this dream-world where I was never really sure what was going on or why. Perhaps that was intended...but geez; I was confused. It was also very political, but 1500 Italian politics, which I have no prior knowledge of or interest in. And lastly but not leastly annoying, Maguire writes like he...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
listenedto
Read in March, 2007
recommends it for:
fairy tale lovers
Set in 16th century Italy this retelling of Snow White combines elements of the fairy tale with the story of the famous Borgia family - The hedonistic pope, his mad incestuous children.
Bianca's father is sent on an impossible mission to bring back a branch of the tree of wisdom (from the garden of eden) and leaves his daughter in the care of Lucrezia Borgia. From here the story goes the traditionally route with Bianca as Snow White & Lucrezia as the evil queen.
Generally Maguire's rete...more
Bianca's father is sent on an impossible mission to bring back a branch of the tree of wisdom (from the garden of eden) and leaves his daughter in the care of Lucrezia Borgia. From here the story goes the traditionally route with Bianca as Snow White & Lucrezia as the evil queen.
Generally Maguire's rete...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
absolute-favorites
Read in June, 2006
I believe that this just may be my favorite Gregory Maguire book to date. My reading this book just so happened to coincide with a history channel series having to do with medieval Italian History, which made the fact that this book was thoroughly sprinkled with this subject matter even more delicious that it would have otherwise.
I literally could not out this book down and finished it in about 12 hours with few breaks. When I finished the book I gave myself about 48 hours and then read it aga...more
I literally could not out this book down and finished it in about 12 hours with few breaks. When I finished the book I gave myself about 48 hours and then read it aga...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
I'm a little surprised to see so many dismal/mediocre reviews of this story here. I found myself to be just as fixated by this story as I was by Wicked (I can't say that about another of his popular novels, The Ugly Stepsister).
I appreciated the position Gregory took in this re-telling of Snow White. I found the inclusion of an actual historical family (the Borgias) intriguing, although I'm not going to research them. I absolutely adored his description of the "dwarves" and I th...more
I appreciated the position Gregory took in this re-telling of Snow White. I found the inclusion of an actual historical family (the Borgias) intriguing, although I'm not going to research them. I absolutely adored his description of the "dwarves" and I th...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in January, 2004
recommends it for:
?
This is by far the least appealing and satisfying of the Maguire fairy tales I've read. I'm not really sure where to begin! I was all set to devour this retelling of Snow White, set within a beautiful Italian landscape and with the wicked "stepmother" cast as an untraditional outcast of royalty. (Maguire does possess a gift for understanding the prevalence of politics these stories imply.) However, the rest was slow going. Unfortunately, I will have to re-read it to give more speci...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
3 comments
Read in July, 2007
Hmm...not sure exactly what to say about this book. This book lacks interesting plot and dragged on and on and on. I was hoping the wicked woman would just kill Snow White so the book would be over! I did not enjoy Maguire's description of the dwarves. From his descriptions, I was unable to get a good feel of what he was imagining. Several weird scenes that I didn't understand (may be partly due to the fact that I am a literal reader). For example, the menstruation scene and the unicorn sce...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in March, 2008
While I really enjoyed _Wicked_, I wasn't at all impressed with this book. Perhaps it's just not what I was in the mood for, but I just couldn't get into it. It didn't engage me. There were parts that I found interesting--I liked what he did with the dwarves and the descriptions of their living environment as they began to differentiate themselves from one another. I also liked the way it made me think about the nature of a mirror and the relationship between mirrors and our senses of identity. ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
myfavorites
Read in July, 2007
Thoroughly enjoyed this retelling of the classic fairy tale. Wicked is a favorite but I was quite disappointed with Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister - so I was a little hesitant to read Mirror, Mirror. But it turned out to be an engaging and magical book. There were so many different voices to be heard throughout and I really enjoyed the twists from the original Snow White - such as the creative names for the rocks/dwarves (Heartless and Mute, Mute, Mute were my favorites). The interweavin...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment























