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The Scarecrow King

A Romantic Retelling of the King Thrushbeard Fairy Tale

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The Scarecrow King

De: Jill Myles
Narrado por: Cassandra Morris
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Princess Rinda of Balinore knows of only one way to get her cold father's attention - be an obnoxious, spoiled princess. When she finds out that the king plans to marry her off to a far-flung nobleman, she puts on her best bratty show in front of the entire court. But Rinda's plan backfires, and she soon finds herself married to the most ineligible man ever. Her new husband is monastery raised, poor as dirt, and a traveling minstrel. A very, very bad traveling minstrel.

But Alek isn't what he seems on the surface, and neither is Rinda. She won't take this marriage lying down and schemes to find herself a new husband - a king. But as she and Alek travel together, they learn that not only are appearances deceiving, but goals can change in the blink of an eye, and love can get in the way of the strongest plans....

The Scarecrow King is a romantic retelling of the King Thrushbeard fairy tale.

©2013 Jill Myles (P)2016 Audible, Inc.
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Snobby princess who learns a lesson in a very hard way. Lots of time passed without really being told towards the end.
Only regret is that her father doesn’t get put in his place at the end.

Entertaining with a side of frustration -_-

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I know the fairy tale about Thrushbeard King, mainly from the film, so I don't know how very much the author changed the original.
Generally I liked it, although I have reservations about a heroine. In the first scenes even I sympathized with her, but before the ball and later appeared to me as the moody brat which isn't taking nothing and nobody into account.
I think that she isn't deserving Aleksander, but he has a good effect on her, so there is a good chance that she will grow into respectful woman and queen.
The book runs quite fast, the whole lasted about a month. At some point one scene reminds me of Lord of the Rings ;-P

Oh Aleksander!

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The first hour showed Princess Rindai to be such an entitled, cruel, shrew that it took me more than half of the story to warm up to her. She fed jewels to the fish just to spite her father and said the most hurtful things to suitors whom she’d only just met. But, I channeled Goldie Hawn’s Annie from the movie Overboard, embraced the teenage hyperbole, and found this to be an entertaining fairytale.

This is not adult, or even YA, romance. This is a story free of sex, language, and violence (except offscreen or to spiders). Instead, this is a story more along the lines of Princess Bride, with a bit less humor and a lot less swashbuckling. While she grew along the journey, Rinda’s attitude was exasperating until the final “you had me at hello” gesture. For the sake of a charming tale, I’ll allow it.

Oversold the spoiled princess setup

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I loved this book. it was so intresting and I highly recommend it to anyone who loves a love novel.

Really good.

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The story is clean. Princess Rinda has grown up in a home where her mother passed away when Rinda was born, an older, beautiful, well-loved sister, and a father who despises Rinda, but dotes on her sister. Be aware, Rinda is only 16. The overall story would've been better if she was at least 18, considering she is slated to be married.

Following the King Thrushbeard tale, Rinda is forced to marry the first man who comes to the castle after she scorns all the suitors her father invited to court her. One man is the King of a neighboring country, who has a beard so scraggly that she calls him the Scarecrow King to his face. (In the original Thrushbeard telling, she claims his beard looks like a thrush nest and expects a bird to peek out at any moment.)

The next man to arrive at the castle is a wandering minstrel, who her father forces her to marry, then she must leave the castle and kingdom immediately.

This retelling is very nicely done, and it does not include any of teaching the princess a lesson in humility as some versions do. There is magic, a bit of adventure, and a chance for Rinda to grow without being taught any harsh lessons. The ending is quite good, though there is a bit of bloodshed. Even Rinda is quite bloody from being tied up, and from using her magic, which required a drop of her blood to use.

My only complaint is the narrator. She was fine for Rinda, and any other female voices, but her male voice reading tended to sound like pre-teen boys who haven't reached puberty yet.

Magical King Thrushbeard retelling

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Once you get through the awful brattiness of the Princess in the first half of the story the book could have become both intriguing and enjoyable......the high pitched narrator ruins it though and sounds like a whiny 8 year old.

Poor Narration ruins story

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This was a struggle from start to finish. I really hated Rinda, she was a brat from start to finish.

It was a struggle.

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