I like this retelling of Les Miserables better than the original book by Victor Hugo.
Don't get me wrong -- I LOVE the story of Jean Valjean. But, you may recall, Hugo's book wearied me when I reread it a couple years ago. The endless digressions, specifically.
So I loved how Emily Golus kept her book's focus on the main character in this retelling. Valshara was a condemned goblin who makes a miraculous escape from her captors and ends up caring for a human child and learning what love, kindness, sacrifice, and truth mean during her ensuing adventures. And we don't wander off to make sarcastic jokes about famous rich people no one knows about, or rhapsodize on the true meaning of loyalty, etc.
And I loved the giant elephant. Very much.
Particularly Good Bits:
For the first time since I could remember, I could rest. But I didn't remember how (p. 14).
Such is the power of love. It's that small, trivial thing that the powerful sneer at and the selfish keep at bay. But allowed its course it will topple evil, transform cities, melt stone hearts, and bring the dead -- like me -- back to life. No water can quench love, and no river can sweep it away. For does not the universe itself run on Love? (p. 229).
If This was a Movie, I Would Rate It: PG-13 for violence, scenes of peril, and child abandonment.
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