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Queen Mab  By  cover art

Queen Mab

By: Kate Danley, William Shakespeare
Narrated by: Julian Rhind-Tutt
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Publisher's summary

When Faunus, the god of daydreams, breaks the heart of Queen Mab, revenge can be the only answer. Using the most powerful families in Verona, they wage their war against one another. But when Mab falls in love, this bitter queen will do anything, even if it means destroying the world, to change the story.

©2014 Kate Danley (P)2016 Kate Danley

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    4 out of 5 stars
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Twist of fae to the world of Romeo and Juliet

Would you listen to Queen Mab again? Why?

I would gladly listen to this story again, not only for Julian's voice but also for hearing the twists to the story as I would now know how it ends and could pick up some smaller details in the wavy road we take.

What does Julian Rhind-Tutt bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you just read the book?

Okay, the first thing I noticed as I listened to the first words of the story, the seductive voice of Julian. *sigh* His accent and flow of his rhythmic tone had me at the first sentence. He uses his breath with the words to draw me to the feeling of the romance present with the characters. Good gracious! I wanted to listen to him for ever! Okay, the quality of the audio - it's splendid. It was clear and clean, nothing to distract for his amazing voice. Julian also did slight differences for the characters that indicated their emotions and personality as he spoke for them.

Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?

I found I was tearing up at one death. Saddened for the lose of life and the lose of a love that was finally felt. In the end, Kate's words and Julian's voice brought pools to my eyes, all works in my heart with the way this ends. Kate has done a splendid job of mixing what Shakespeare created with Romeo and Juliet and Queen Mab with her own story involving Queen Mab and the reason she's the way she is. I thoroughly enjoyed the story while I listened to it.

Any additional comments?

I do enjoy the poetic flow of descriptions written by Kate. It's similar to Shakespearian and, as the fairy descriptions do, has a unique feel to drawing images in our minds. Even what they do in action has a hidden meaning to get to what they want. And the fairy beings have centuries to wait for what they truly want, as they are immortal. And that the do here.

In the beginning things feel simple, the fae and their mischievous ways and Mab reck her revenge on those involved. Easy to understand and follow, which gives us the grace time to slip into thinking used to the speak of poetic words. We get the history and important events leading up to the big show of what happens with Romeo and Juliet. Bringing us the details from a few different POV's that tells what the characters are working toward, what they desire in doing all they've done. We mostly get the POV of Mab, but we do slip to Juno's head as well as Faunus too.

Oh, even Queen Mab has an equal out there that puts her in her place. Mab is not the only powerful being in the realm. Learning this in the story, we see Mab suffer from coming toe to toe with another powerful being. And there are lessons to be learned. In the fairy way, things twist and turn to bring those involved to do opposite what they thought they would do. There is always one pinning for power, and will do anything for it.

For what do the fairy of old compete over? Power? Affection? It seems that love is at the root of all, to feel or not feel love. But, the question is who was scorned deepest, as it seems several are seething to get revenge for the lack of love in their live. Love seems to be one emotion to easily manipulate to get what you want, yet you stand the chance of losing to love as well, which can be good and bad and what Mab learns here.

When I finished this story, I thought this could be one that young adults could listen/read as well. There was no terrible language or overly intimate scenes. It's about finding love. This could easily be read/listened to by all ages.

Who was the true player of these games? In the end I wonder if it wasn't Juno, who knew all needed to learn lessons and come to who they are.

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a really good book

I thought the story was wonderful, I was expecting a different take on Romeo & Juliet, and it was. I'm not one for love stories, but this was worth it. the narrator definitely put u into the story

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A beautifully poetic retelling!

"Bloodshed for bloodshed makes mourners of us all.  There is no joy in revenge, no taste of honeyed happiness found in the goblet of rogue justice served."

From the book Queen Mab by Kate Danley and William Shakespeare.

What games of trickery and cunning are played, with mortals as the pawns, when the Gods and Fae feud! Queen Mab by Kate Danley and William Shakespeare is a story weaving together William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet along with the story of what possibly caused the two great houses of Montague and Capulet, a feud between the faerie queen, Queen Mab Bringer of Dreams, and the Roman Satyr Pastoral God, Faunus Bringer of Daydreams.

In this story the classic Shakespearean tale of Romeo and Juliet is told from the view points of Queen Mab and Faunus, when Faunus betrays Queen Mab, enraging her and breaking her heart, the two start a centuries long feud that will pull the house's of Montague and Capulet into the storm that in the end, as we know, will lead to a tragic end between the star crossed lovers, Romeo and Juliet. This book is a must read if you want to see how this tragedy unfolded, the causes behind it, and exactly what happened to all the players on this game board of love and betrayal in a beautiful retelling from Kate Danley.

There wasn't much that I disliked about this book. I can't really think of a single criticism. What I did love is how beautifully Kate Danley captures William Shakespeare's prose and rhythm. She weaves such a beautiful tale of romance, love, betrayal, anger, revenge, mischief, and trickery with the beauty and elegance of Shakespeare himself. Then I need to mention how she also entwines the story of Romeo and Juliet with this awesome retelling adding in Queen Mab and Faunus, along with some other surprise guest players, and a wonderful twisted ending. As I end this review I also have to give a well deserved applause to the narrator of this beautiful tale, Julian Rhind-Tutt, as I listened to this as an audiobook. His voice added so much depth, beauty, and passion to this already phenomenal tale! I will definitely be buying this as a physical book to keep on my shelves as well!

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

did not breck the integrity of the original

The gods of old are infamous for playing with humans, giving out tokens of favor or destroying bloodlines over some trivial slight.  Taking one of the most famous tragedies by Shakespeare, Kate Danley weaves a new twist in which the mythological gods play an intricate and deadly role.  The houses of Montague and Capulet are the key victims being used by both Queen Mab, the bringer of nightly dreams and Faunus, the bringing of day dreams to get what they want.  However, Queen Mab discovers true love and becomes transformed trying to prevent Faunus from destroying the houses and her true-love.

Danley stays true to the story being careful to weave in hers without taking away from Shakespeare’s infamous love tragedy.  Danley did not attempt to write in the eloquent Shakespearean style; her writing is different yet just as expressive and fluent in a simpler style.

Shakespeare is known for intrigue and Danley continues with the tradition; her intrigue clearly compliments and fits with the classic tale making her story of Queen Mab richer and more powerful.  It is never a good thing when gods interfere; they are seen as petty and selfish.  While Queen Mab begins that way, her character grows revealing that even gods may have a depth of kindness hidden somewhere deep within themselves.

As an English major and fan of Shakespearean writings, I was not sure that I would like this book.  I had my doubts that anyone could make Romeo and Juliet better. Danley is a gifted and skilled writer.  She successfully tied in her story without breaking the integrity of the original story.

The characters were well-developed moving one from disliking Queen Mab to feeling a range of emotions from dislike to pity to sadness to cheering her on.  When a character goes through such powerful changes and grows, the listener cannot help but change their opinion.

The narrator, Julian Rhind-Tutt is talented.  His narration was flawless.  I liked that he spoke clearly and with a cadence that felt comfortable – not too fast nor too slow.  His vocal expressions were strong especially during pivotal times.  I enjoyed hearing his voice; soothing and even.  Well done!

There were no issues at all with the production and I have to say while there was definitely an opportunity for it to sound more theatrical with sound effects, I am delighted that the production company chose not to go that route.  This was already a rich tale, it needed nothing more than a talented narrator which it has.  Anything more would have taken away from the story.

Audiobook was provided for review by the author.

Please find this complete review and many others at my review blog

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The Magical Underpinnings of Character Motivation

I thought the concept behind this novel was clever and compelling. What if the motivations of supernatural beings, goddesses, faeries et al. are made an explicit element of the plot, instead of random action that can't be accounted for but simply accommodated? "Queen Mab" provides "Romeo and Juliet" with just such a twist, where the power struggles of the faerie beings are even more potent and persistent than those of the human families.

The character of Queen Mab herself undergoes a transformation during the events of the tale. Iniitally she seems as malicious and whimsical as anyone with a nearly unlimited realm of power and a very long life is likely to be: she controls the dreams and fancies of sleeping human beings, and is thus quite influential. When conflicts ensue with Faunus, who controls daydreams, and then Juno steps in to make sure her own interests are protected, Mab remains powerful, yet must contrive all her machinations under Juno's curse, which makes her face reflect the nature of her heart's intentions. So she can no longer count on mesmerizing beauty at all times--quite a blow to a faerie queen! At the same time she suffers yet another blow in falling in love with a mere mortal, basically akin to a rare butterfly falling for a mayfly.

Kate Danley succeeds in making the tragedy of Romeo and Juliet just another peripheral difficulty in the permanently phantasmogorical realm of magical power struggles.The book's most interesting impact is the transformation in Mab's character--whoever really imagined a faerie being capable of positive change?

The language of the tale preserves the iambic poetry of Shakespeare's dialogue while successfully creating a distinctly non-human realm for the magical beings--at times the atmosphere feels almost like a rave at 5 am, where absolutely anything is possible and will be so again the next time. Julian Rhind-Tutt's smooth, melodic narration helped pull off this otherwordly effect.This is a tale about faeries that is nothing like a fairy tale!

"This audiobook was provided by the author, narrator, or publisher at no cost in exchange for an unbiased review courtesy of AudiobookBoom dot com."

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Great retelling of Romeo and Juliet

What made the experience of listening to Queen Mab the most enjoyable?

The narrator was fantastic. I liked how the author expanded the story of Romeo and Juliet by bringing in gods and their influence in shaping the tragic love story. I loved Mercutio.

Have you listened to any of Julian Rhind-Tutt’s other performances before? How does this one compare?

I have not, but I will definitely look for other books he has narrated.

Any additional comments?

This audiobook was giving by the author, narrator, or publisher at no cost in exchange for an unbiased review via Audiobook Boom.

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