Mirror Mirror

Mirror Mirror

3.23 of 5 stars 3.23  ·  rating details  ·  19,231 ratings  ·  1,155 reviews
The year is 1502, and seven-year-old Bianca de Nevada lives perched high above the rolling hills and valleys of Tuscany and Umbria at Montefiore, the farm of her beloved father, Don Vicente. But one day a noble entourage makes its way up the winding slopes to the farm - and the world comes to Montefiore. In the presence of Cesare Borgia and his sister, the lovely and vain...more
Paperback, 331 pages
Published 2009 by Headline Review (first published October 14th 2003)
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Krissa
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 family in 1...more
Amanda
Mar 26, 2007 Amanda rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition 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 specific reasons fo...more
Erin
May 05, 2008 Erin rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition 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. They plan the demise of Bianca De Nevada,...more
Xaka
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 think that's where...more
Bette
I thought that this was a very disappointing book. After reading Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister, which I loved, and Wicked, which I liked, I expected Mirror, Mirror to be a fun read at the very least. It was not. I love the idea of playing with fairy tales; but in my view, Maguire did not succeed in transforming Snow White into a compelling contemporary re-telling.
Lynda
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Courtney
May 08, 2008 Courtney rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition 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 book...more
Danny
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 surely not h...more
Britta
"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 walk on."

"Silence can be tactical. Even God us...more
Lindsey
I really hated this book. It was like Snow White on acid. Very fragmented and choppy. Even the book cover was creepy. I love retold fairy tales, but I thought this one was a bit of a stretch, and just...weird. I couldn't tell where it was try to go; was it a horror story, a murder mystery, a complete mistake? All in all, it was trying too hard to be too edgy, in my humble opinion. Mirror Mirror didn't recapture the magic that all of Maguire's other novels held. I was really disappointed.

In fact...more
Marianne Ruggiero
I loved this book. I find Gregory Maguire's style of writing and use of language different, very compelling. It reminded me of "Wicked," in that the beginning was kind of difficult due to the unusual type of narration. When I got used to that, I got gradually drawn into the tale and couldn't put it down. I loved the inclusion of short poems at the beginning of each chapter, some had the feel of ancient chants. And the woodcut illustrations are lovely, they really complement the text. For a tale...more
Al

The year is 1502, and seven-year-old Bianca de Nevada lives perched high above the rolling hills and valleys of Tuscany and Umbria at Montefiore, the farm of her beloved father, Don Vicente. But one day a noble entourage makes its way up the winding slopes to the farm -- and the world comes to Montefiore.

In the presence of Cesare Borgia and his sister, the lovely and vain Lucrezia -- decadent children of a wicked pope -- no one can claim innocence for very long. When Borgia sends Don Vicente on

...more
Michelle
Who is the fairest of them all?

With the recent re-release of Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, now was a great time to read Mcguires' take on the Grimm Brothers tale. Mirror Mirror reflects the well known story through the eyes of all characters. Set in Italy in the 1500's, the novel includes historical figures along with the fictional. Machiavelli, De Medici and De Borgia are among the more well known names used through out.

As we all know, the story revolves around a young girl with pa...more
Emma
As far as fairy tale rewrites go, this one is good. The basic story is the same, he doesn’t mess about with the apple or the dwarfs. It is set, as mentioned in the blurb, around the famous Borgia family and if I am honest that is why I bought it. I love that section of history and it doesn’t disappoint. Obviously maguire takes some creative liberties with the history section but if I can deal with it then most people shouldn't be put of by it.

However, it took me a long time to get into this book...more
Gloria
At first I was a little surprised by all the negative reviews of this book. I think it's one of his best. In fact, I ended up liking it better than Wicked. The first time I read the book, I didn't really "get it." The second time though, I was floored. It strikes me as a psychological and metaphorical novel. Whereas Wicked and it's sequels are pretty much straight-up exciting storytelling rife with action and politics, Mirror Mirror has extended sections that in first reading are confusing. But...more
Dan
Gregory Maguire is turning out to be one of my favorite authors. I have already reviewed Wicked! (http://www.treehugger.hu/node/708) and Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister, and just read Mirror, Mirror this weekend. Mirror, Mirror is the retelling of the classic Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, but typically Maguire, flipped on its head and told mostly from the perspective of the Witch. In this version, Snow White is called Bianca de Nevada and was born on a farm in Renaissance Tuscany in 1495 am...more
Bart Breen
Mirror Mirror: A Novel

I confess. I've read most of Maguire's works and I am a true fan. He writes somewhat to a formula in these Fairy Tale revisions, but the formula itself is not enough to carry the day. Maguire is a truly talented writer whose abilities are what makes it work.

Compared to his other works I was disappointed, but only slightly. Wicked, and Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister are truly brilliant and effective pieces of work which set off Maguire's social commentary to great effect...more
Justine
I should by love this book given that it's rife with shit that makes my literary appendage tingle:

1) Snow White, arguably one of the most unfortunate fairy tale ladies and just as arguably one of the most metaphorically grim Grimm stories (sexual awakening? blood red lips, red hair, snow white skin? duel with older, scary witchy woman? encased in glass? bites of poisoned apples? shacking up with a band of creepy dwarves? (okay that one gets a little harder to interpret))
2) Renaissance Italy
3) B...more
Pam Logan
I received this book in winning a random drawing. It is not a book that I would have bought for myself, but I enjoyed reading it. Gregory Maguire wonderfully interwove the facts of the Borgias of Italy in 1502 with the traditional story of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, in this story, sometimes eight.

Cesare and Lucrezia Borgia, the children of a wicked pope, survive or more likely embrace rumors of incest, poisonings, adultery, conspiracy and murder. Cesare sends Don Vincente on a quest to fi...more
Adriane Devries
Mirrors reflect truth, and truth exists before the reflection reaches the eye at the speed of light. Mirrors, in essence, are fortune tellers, showing us what we are to be. In Gregory Maguire’s Mirror Mirror, characters emerge onto the world stage much as we do: through the formative families we are born into, the trials we battle, the relationships we forge along the way. Through his retelling of the familiar Snow White fairy tale, and in a setting distinctively Renaissance-European, we trace t...more
Angela
A dark and vivid retelling of Snow White transposed to the Italy of the Borgias. Lucrezia is the evil stepmother and five-year-old Bianca de Nevada grows into the role of Snow White. Vicente, a minor landlord beholden to Lucrezia and her brother/lover Cesare, unwillingly leaves his motherless daughter to go on a seemingly futile errand for Cesare. Journeying to Greece to seek out a branch of the holy Tree of Knowledge, Vicente languishes for years in the dungeon of the very monks who possess the...more
Karen
Why I Chose This Book
I had no business reading this book with so many other books ahead of it on the list! But I inherited this milk crate of books that I have been driving around with in the trunk of my car for a week or two, and because the top row was a lot of mystery novels, including a bunch of books in a series of Dutch crime novels (*shudder*), I didn’t really dig through it with much interest. But then there I was on Saturday at some kid’s birthday party in the park, and I was packing up...more
Our Intrepid Heroine
I was in the mood for some fairy tales, and I saw this on the shelf at the library.

I really wanted to like it. Instead, I kept reading because I was sure it was going to get good at some point. The premise sounded interesting, but the plot was convoluted, annoying, and historically meh. There was so much Maguire could have done with this that he passed over, such as the established moral ambiguity of his "dwarfs," which were closer to rock spirits than actual dwarfs.

They started out as interest...more
Chinook
He is an author who writes retellings of fairy tales from the perspectives of other characters. I read Wicked a couple of years ago and I remember enjoying it a lot.

In the last month I've read Mirror, Mirror and Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister. Mirror, Mirror didn't interest me as much. I loved the historical setting but didn't love the weird dwarves part. Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister I liked a lot more, I think largely because everything is simply placed into a historical context and the...more
Brett
I tried really hard to love this book but then reached a point where I realised that it just wasn't going to happen. For such a descriptive writer I found myself clinging to shadowy images of characters and images rather than the whole picture which is what Maguire readers are usually used to getting when reading one of his books... It seemed like there was not enough known about the main 'Snow White' character to truly feel for her or even care about what happened to her. I remember liking it a...more
Nikki
I like any historical fiction, especially if it has to do with the Borgia’s. While this wasn’t totally centered around them, they were in it, which made me happy. Besides that, the book was still good. The take on the dwarves was very interesting, really entering a magical, fantastical element into something that he could have turned into just a more historical retelling of a Snow White story that sounded more true. Which, actually, I probably would have enjoyed more, but what he did with it was...more
Amy
This was another book that landed in the pile of "to-read" when I did a sweep of my bookshelf that the beginning of this year. It was more of a "read and decide to keep" or "read and get rid of" kind of cleaning.

Thankfully, my friends at the Mesa Library had an audio copy that I was able to download and listen to. Not sure I would have gotten through this without it. And the audio helped for all of those hard to pronounce Italian and Spanish names that are peppered throughout. This was definite...more
Rachael
This is a retelling of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Bianca's father has been sent away on an impossible mission to find the tree that formed the cross Jesus Christ was nailed to. If he refuses this quest, his daughter will be killed and his land taken away. Bianca, is eventually sent into the woods by the hunter when her guardian tries to kill her. In the wood she discovers an ancient race of rock people who develop into 7 separate beings to take care of
her.
The difference between this book...more
Pankhuree
How hard can it be to tell a good story when you are using as your plot, one of the most famous fairy tales of the West? But Maguire does a shoddy job. None of the characters emerge out of their one-dimensionality, dialogue is stilted, all the actions seem contrived and even the places where the author tries to use some of his own inventions (dwarves made of stone coming to life), it falls utterly flat. Maguire knows how to use big words and he's read a couple of biographies about the Borgias....more
Trixie
From the title itself, it can be easily be presumed that this novel is inclined to the famous Snow White fairy tale story. Published in 2004, currently, Mirror, Mirror is now well known as a film, but very much not adapted from this novel.

After reading this, I asked myself "Did i like it or not?"

Knowing that this is from the same author of Wicked I thought I would be much delighted in reading this, but it turned out to be just okay. Maguire's inclusion of the Borgia history was quite interesting...more
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The unicorn? 3 42 Jul 12, 2012 02:32pm  
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Gregory Maguire is an American author, whose novels are revisionist retellings of children's stories (such as L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz into Wicked). He received his Ph.D. in English and American Literature from Tufts University, and his B.A. from the State University of New York at Albany. He was a professor and co-director at the Simmons College Center for the Study of Children'...more
More about Gregory Maguire...
Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West (The Wicked Years, #1) Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister Son of a Witch (The Wicked Years, #2) A Lion Among Men (The Wicked Years, #3) Lost

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