I think this fell closer to a 3.5 for me, but rounding up for nostalgia and Goodreads doesn’t allow half stars. I read this book well over a dozen times as a child, and after re-reading Fairest, also by Gail Carson Levine, I knew I needed to revisit this old favorite too. But while Fairest still held up now that I’m an adult with an adult perspective on life, The Two Princesses of Bamarre didn’t quite feel the same. I think it was the world-building that kept me struggling here. While Fairest and Ella Enchanted are set within the same universe, Bamarre is it’s own “universe” with different types of monsters and the legend of Drualt that heavily influences the characters.
There’s very little nuance here, and it rubbed me the wrong way that we’re told just to accept that specters, ogres, gryphons, and dragons are just pure evil and desire nothing but blood and destruction. This is middle grades, so the simplicity makes sense. A classic good vs. evil, if you will…except it’s not that simple. The dragon Vollys points out that humans (specifically the hero Drualt) tortured and murdered her kind with slow, unnecessarily painful deaths. But Addie never explores this revelation, and in fact, her dear sister Meryl is portrayed as somewhat bloodthirsty, eager to kill monsters. It felt like we brushing at the surface of something - something like the idea that humans are brutality violent toward anything they consider other. Were monsters truly dangerous or just protecting themselves from the so-called heroes that destroyed their kind? Again, this is middle grades, and as a child, I was never bothered by these things. But now as an adult, I can’t help wishing we got a little more depth there.
Also what is it with naming practically immortal guys Rhys and having them fall in love with young girls that are a fraction of their age? Obviously, Gail Carson Levine did it first. But I couldn’t help noticing the similarity her of this Rhys being 78 and Addie being 16. Not exactly the same as ACOTAR…but here, sorcerers living an extremely long time has little bearing on the story. Rhys could have been 17 with a normal lifespan and the story would have been no different. So why in the heck are we promoting the idea that such a large age gap is totally fair and fine as long as it’s fantasy and they’re in love? I can let it pass in adult books, but in middle grades…seems truly unnecessary.