Princesses of the Midnight
Ball
By Jessica Day George
Reviewed by Elizabeth Mosolovich
Far beneath in the Kingdom Under Stone, a desperate queen makes a
deal with King Under Stone to end the war between her nation and their
neighboring country. King Under Stone agrees and sends the queen away, wish
granted. But such wishes come with a price, and as the queen gives birth to a
total of twelve beautiful daughters, the King Under Stone dreams of a world
upon which the sun shines, and schemes how to gain access to it.
Eighteen years later, Rose, the eldest daughter of King Gregor and
the late Queen Maude of Westfalen, and her eleven younger sisters are all
forced to take on their mother's debt and dance every night in morose balls in
the Kingdom Under Stone, paired with the cold and cruel half-human sons of King
Under Stone. As the sisters go through their days incredibly fatigued and with
tattered dance slippers, their father decides to get to the bottom of things
and offers any prince who can solve the mystery of the dance slippers the hand
of the princess of his choosing. But when the princes keep turning up dead,
accusations of witchcraft abound and the sisters are threatened from all sides.
Enter Galen, a former soldier finally returning home from war to
stay with his aunt and uncle. Finding work in the palace gardens, he soon
learns of the king's contest and, after meeting Princess Rose, he decides to
try and help the sisters. Using a magic cloak he received from an old woman he met on the road and, with
some help from the kind and mysterious head gardener, Galen enters the strange
and oppressive world of the Kingdom Under Stone. Armed with his courage,
intelligence, knitting needles, and the princesses' own determination, Galen
attempts to rescue the sisters and destroy the Kingdom Under Stone once and for
all.
This was a magical
book, told in the alternative voices of Rose and Galen. An exciting and
beautiful retelling of "The Twelve Dancing Princesses," Princesses of
the Midnight Ball teems with adventure, romance, magic, helpful wizards and a
villainous sorcerer, all set in a fictional version of Germany. It has a good
pace and everything is easy to understand without being oversimplified. I
highly recommend this for those who enjoy fantasy and adventure, and if you
enjoy this, you will certainly enjoy its two sequels, Princess of Glass, based
on "Cinderella", and Princess of the Silver Woods, a thrilling
retelling of "Little Red Riding Hood."