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Ash
Ash
Author: Malinda Lo
In the wake of her father’s death, Ash is left alone to pay off his debts in the service of her own step mother. Consumed with grief, her only joy comes by the light of the dying hearth fire, re-reading the fairy tales her mother once told her. In her dreams, someday the fairies will steal her away, as they are said to do. When she meets t...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780316040105
ISBN-10: 031604010X
Publication Date: 10/5/2010
Pages: 272
Rating:
  • Currently 3.4/5 Stars.
 10

3.4 stars, based on 10 ratings
Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Members Wishing: 50
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
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  • Currently 3/5 Stars.
reviewed Ash on + 2 more book reviews
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Before I even picked this book up, I wanted to like it. I heard some great things about it, the excerpt on the jacket was spare and beautiful, and I have a *thing* for huntresses, in general. Also, the cover is great.

I *did* like this book. The writing is neat, occasionally a little terse, but mostly just as spare and lovely as the jacket excerpt indicated. I loved the summer courtship between Ash and the huntress. And I loved the fairytales that were tucked into the story itself, a neat detail.

The main reason I didn't give this book five stars was because I had a huge problem with the world-building.

The world of this book seemed like a mish-mash of Regency England, generic-Irish-fantasy, and the occasional random Asian detail. There is a long and honored tradition of having a huntress lead the king's hunts. Ash's step-mother sells the country estate and they move to the townhouse in the city. Ash's stepsisters are desperate to marry wealthy men, lest they be condemned to a life of drudgery. The prince is decidedly Asian, but there is a profusion of Irish names.

I had no frame of reference for this kind of contradiction within a fantasy setting, and it was a nagging disorientation the entire time I was reading. But this was a purely personal objection.

In spite of my reservations regarding the world-building, I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys YA fantasy/romance.

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  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
reviewed Ash on + 7145 more book reviews
Reviewed by Samantha Clanton, aka Harlequin Twilight for TeensReadToo.com

There's something about fairy tales that always feel magical. No matter the story, no matter the characters, there is something about them that just makes you feel the magic inside them. ASH makes you feel every bit of that magic, and more.

Just about everyone, everyone female at least, over the age of 13 or so has heard and/or seen the story of Cinderella. Whether it is Disney's version or the classic fairy tale or the Brothers Grimm version or even one of the other hundreds of versions that have been created over the years, we all know it. ASH is a version that I'm sure you've never heard of before, but that you should.

After losing her mother, Ash's father takes a wife, Lady Isobel. Soon after meeting Lady Isobel, her and her two daughters move into the house with Ash and her father and things drastically change. In line with the fairy tale, Ash's father becomes gravely ill and passes away shortly thereafter. Which not only leaves Ash heartbroken, but also leaves her without either of her parents, and stuck with a "family" that doesn't even like to look at her.

This is the beginning that we all know about Cinderella, and while Ash has many aspects that are the same as the original tale, they are not the same in the slightest. Ash doesn't get the typical fairy godmother; she gets something else all together, but something even more powerful than anything in the candy-coated version that is fed to us as children.

Ash gets a fairy, Sidhean, who is even more lethal and dangerous than anything her stepmother or stepsisters could do/say to Ash. But that's masked in an extent by the beauty and the friendship that lies between Ash and Sidhean. And I mean that to an extent far more than the typical connection between two characters; their relationship is more developed and deeper than most would have thought possible in a novel that doesn't even break 300 pages.

But one day Ash's life, and heart, changes forever. She meets Kaisa, the King's Huntress, and there is something between them that's different from the second they meet. Ash begins to stop chasing fairies and starts to live in the world without fairies and the fairy tales, and learns how to hunt and to ride and to track animals. But in this change of life, there is a price for keeping it and for continuing to let it grow.

Through her relationship with Kaisa, Ash finds what it means to grow and what it means to let her heart guide her and, in that realization, she also finds a new capacity to live. Ash prefers the company of the Huntress to the company of the Prince, and that makes this story even more powerful. Malinda Lo has created a world that is magical and finds its own footing in a world where fairy tales are viewed as being for children and has given the older crowd a fairy tale of their own.

This is some of the most beautiful, lyrical writing I've seen in a long time and that is so refreshing. The imagery just blows me away and it's like you're standing right there with Ash through everything, whether it be pain, joy, adventure, or terror. It would kill me to see this story get cast aside and labeled a "lesbian retelling of Cinderella," because it's so much more than that. It's a beautiful story that anyone could relate to and that everyone could take something away from.

I found myself hoping for a sequel in a story that doesn't need one, just because I wanted to spend more time with the characters in this world that Ms. Lo has created. It's beautiful, it's magical, and it's a story that, until now, I didn't know could even exist, but it does, and it needs to be heard. Not to mention, look at the cover. It is so beautiful! This is easily one of my favorite stories this year and I hope that if it's given the chance, it can become everyone else's.

Book Wiki

Original Publication Date (YYYY-MM-DD)
People/Characters
Ash (Primary Character)
Kaisa (Major Character)
Sidhean (Major Character)
Lady Isobel (Average Character)

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