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Tale of the Month
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March Tale of the Month - Cinderella
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I personally favor the Grimm version. There is something about their brutality (in so many of their stories) that I find appealing. I remember being a child and contemplating how it would be to want to cut off your own toe or heel - want to! It blew my mind.

Considering the release of a new Jane Eyre movie, in what ways do you feel that Jane Eyre echoes Cinderella? is it a more modern Cinderella?

When I was little, apparently I LOVED the Rogers and Hammerstein version of Cinderella (1965). I also liked Ever After. There are so many other adaptations, and they keep coming out with new ones-- it seems to be a favorite for young Disney stars.
Ella Enchanted is one of my FAVORITE books of all time. I believe it was the first fairy tale retelling that I (knowingly) read. There is also The Rough-Face Girl, which I adore. The artwork is so beautiful, and I really liked the idea behind it.

When I was little, apparently I LOVED the Rogers and Hammerstein version of Cinderella (1965). I also liked Ever After. There are so many other adaptations, and they keep coming out with new ones-- it seems to be a favorite for young Disney stars.
Ella Enchanted is one of my FAVORITE books of all time. I believe it was the first fairy tale retelling that I (knowingly) read. There is also The Rough-Face Girl, which I adore. The artwork is so beautiful, and I really liked the idea behind it.

I really wouldn't consider it an outright Cinderella story, though. I think it could be compared to a lot of different fairy tales, but in the end-- Jane is Jane.

I have never read any books by any of the Bronte sisters... (terrible, I know)
Hmmm, I don't know Mawgojzeta; there's got be some law that all women have to read at least one Bronte before the age 15.

Actually, Anne Bronte is rather more current than the others considering that she deals with spousal abuse.



Congrats on the graduation Mindy!
Miriam, I think you are right. Sometimes you have to be the right age for the book.
Miriam, I think you are right. Sometimes you have to be the right age for the book.




Ella Enchanted was the first fairy tale retelling I read - I read it years ago and read it again and again, I really loved it.
I really want to get into the old versions like the Brothers Grimm so have ordered lots of the classic versions.

In that one the clock, broom, etc, have personalities and converse with the girl. And the witch is neither her mother nor a 'godmother.' The dreamy description of the events at the ball is worth the price of the book itself.

I agree about the echoes of Cinderella in Jane Eyre - as well as Beauty and the Beast.


Booker sums up the Rags to Riches plot with 5 stages:
1. Initial wretchedness (usually) at home, and the 'Call' - mistreated at a young age, then something happens to call or send them out into a wider world.
2. Out into the world, initial success - first reward but limited, left incomplete.
3. The central crisis - Everything suddenly goes wrong, and great despair. This is the worst moment in the story.
4. Independence and the final ordeal - Coming out of the despair and growing a new inner strength... but this must be put to the test and the dark shadow standing between the protagonist and happiness must be removed once and for all.
5. Final union, completion and fulfillment - Usually a state of complete loving union with the 'Prince' or 'Princess', and/or the gaining of a 'kingdom,' where they will reign in complete happiness ("they lived happily ever after")

The Finnish scholar Antti Aarne and the American folklorist Stith Thompson categorized most fairy tales in some way or another. For example, Rumpelstiltskin is a "Name of the Helper" tale.
I definitely prefer the Perrault version because of the Fairy Godmother. I guess because it is the first version I was familiar with as a child, the Godmother became one of my favourite all time characters. When I read the Grimm's version I felt something missing because she is not in it. I never thought about Jane Eyre as a Cinderella Story it s so much more Beauty and the Beast! I am currently reading The Fairy Godmother by Mercedes Lackey and not liking it that much yet, maybe it will grow on me.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Fairy Godmother (other topics)The Seven Basic Plots: Why We Tell Stories (other topics)
The Glass Slipper (other topics)
The Rough-Face Girl (other topics)
Ella Enchanted (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Eleanor Farjeon (other topics)Anne Brontë (other topics)
What do you think about Cinderella? What is your favorite version? Do you like or hate any of the movie versions?