“The Healer” is set in Daria, presumably around the time of “The Hero and the Crown”, and gives us a chance to see Luthe again, if not to learn anything more about him. Instead the focus is on Sahath, a former mage, and Lily, a healer who was born without a voice, though the peaceful and slightly melancholy mood is almost as important as either character. The ending teases a sequel that I would be glad to read, but though such a thing is almost certainly not forthcoming it’s nonetheless nice to have a chance to meet Luthe again.
Luthe also appears in “The Stagman”, showing his more human side: the princess Ruen, who may not have really wanted the happy ending she receives, is perhaps the most interesting character in the book.
“Touk’s House” may or may not be set in Daria (it doesn’t feature Luthe), but it has a similar theme, of a quiet young woman who prefers a quiet and peaceful life — and, incidentally or not, a non-human lover — to being Queen. McKinley overplays her hand a bit, though, making the royal court that Erana decides against staying in almost entirely unpleasant, while Touk is representative of the life she knows best: Ruen, who was raised to be a Queen, and has a pleasant husband and a not unhappy life at the court where she has always lived, is a better and subtler achievement.
“Buttercups” is also set in generic fantasy-world: the point of a story is that a younger woman marries an older man and everything turns out ok. Since McKinley herself married an older man, it’s hard to avoid seeing this as a form of self-reassurance. (In fact, all the women in the first four stories marry older men, or stagmen or trolls.)
The title story is a sharp contrast, being set in modern-day New York (well, modern-day when the story was written in the early '90s or so). The story is simply about a girl trying to adjust to moving to a new town, and anybody (from the U.S., at least) whose family moved while they were between the ages of 12 and 18 will recognize and empathize with at least some of what Annabelle goes through here. The fantastic aspect is carefully woven in so as not to disturb the fabric of what is, all in all, the best story here.