The stories in this collection rated lower as I read forwards. I'll review them separately (and briefly) to give my full thoughts. I had high hopes for The Princess Tales Vol. 2! It was mainly the last one that got to me, to be honest. I would still recommend for the first two, or pick them up separately, which can be done. Though of course you might like what I didn't!!
ALSO. There is one trope that seems to pop up in all three of these stories: mean older siblings. It stood out sooo strongly that it kind of bothered me by the last book (just because the older sibling thing was the motivating factor for everything). I would just suggest pausing between the tales if you think that might bother you, like it did for me by the last tale.
Cinderellis and the Glass Hill
A different take on Cinderella (but only smaller references). Ellis' two older brothers completely ignore him, no matter how hard Ellis tries to impress them. Meanwhile, the two brothers are the best of friends. Ellis wants nothing more than to join in on that special friendship. He invents growing powder, shrinking powder, etc. that help him become the best farmer around but his brothers could care les. (Gail Carson Levine's descriptions on how Ellis invents these powders were really humourous and creative.)
We then have the princess, whose father decides, "Hey, she needs a husband now! I know, the man who can get his horse to climb a glass hill and get an apple from my daughter can marry her!"
I liked this story the most. 4.5 stars Ellis' desire to be noticed by his brothers and the princess' parallel efforts to get her father's attentions were nicely developed in such a short tale. I loved their characters and they were cute together.
For Biddle's Sake
A girl named Parsley (because she will only eat Parsley) is raised by a fairy who loves to turn things into frogs. Parsley ends up turned into a frog (by accident) and tries to help a young prince claim his throne instead of his quarreling older brothers.
It didn't take me long to notice an older brother theme. I enjoyed this tale, thought not as much as Cinderellis and the Glass Hill. Parsley was a sweet, sweet girl and the morals in this story really shone through her and the young prince's friendship. 4 stars
The Fairy's Return
A princess falls in love with a baker's son (who wants nothing to do with being a baker at all) but both families forbid the union.
I think I disliked this story from the first page. First off, we had the mean older brothers trope again. Which maybe wouldn't have been so bad if 1) I hadn't read all three of these stories one after the other (but of course, this is a volume so it's PUT one after the other or 2) I didn't dislike so many other things. Second off, the older brothers are characterized by a passion for making up words. Their made up words were neither funny (which they were supposed to be at times) nor interesting. It just made things hard to follow. The father (which this book has for our protagonist) is characterized by a love for non-rhyming poems? And they just broke up the narrative.
So that is the family of our baker's son, Robin. Despite how unlikeable they all are, they spend the entire book hating on him because HIS passion is for telling jokes (bad jokes which are not funny, I'm sorry, but in the book are supposed to be really funny). And Robin wins over Princess Lark with his humour but then the families keep them apart.
Time goes by and then the ending of the book was equally unfunny (TO ME, this is MY OPINION, you may find it funny) and then when I thought it was the ending, something else happened so there was ANOTHER bit and then the ACTUAL ending made me go, "Why did we not do that ALLLL that way at the beginning then??"
So I just did not vibe with this tale in the volume. 2 stars
Overall Thoughts
This is not what I would consider GCL's best writing, but the creativity in Cinderellis and the Glass Hill is certainly one of my favourites when it comes to her short retellings. 3.5 overall rating.