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Cinderella and the Colonel by K.M. Shea
Cinderella and the Colonel by K.M. Shea













Cinderella and the Colonel by K.M. Shea

This detracts from the Cinderella retelling, and it’s not quite as brilliant as Ever After (I mean, Leonardo Da Vinci as a fairy godmother? Can you really ever beat that?) or Cinder, which I loved to pieces, but Cinderella, Friedrich, and the nobles are interesting enough to carry the plot. Friedrich’s role in that plot is pivotal yet interesting, but this story really does spend a lot of time building into the larger ‘evil abounds’ plot of the shared fairytale universe.

Cinderella and the Colonel by K.M. Shea

The star of the plot really is the politics around the military and uniting the two countries via a marriage alliance.

Cinderella and the Colonel by K.M. Shea

The fairy godmother has some help, and she doesn’t play the important role in the story as I was hoping she would. She’s aloof but helpful, which was an interesting choice. They could be filed away as creative twists, but the step-mother is decidedly non-evil. There are several points from the ‘classic’ Cinderella tale that were lacking for me. There is no faster way to my sugar-coated heart than making me think of Ever After. There’s a lot of talks about taxes and estates, and the opening–where Cinderella is working in the market and bonding with her servants–had shades of Ever After. Like Elise, Cinderella is another princess that’s obsessed with business and finances, and Queen Freja also has a practically minded head on her shoulders. It has political twists with Cinderella being the highest ranked noble in a conquered country, and she’s under pressure to marry a noble from her country or marry Friedrich, a conquering army officer from Erlauf. I really loved the familial relationships in that book, but on the upside, the romance between Cinderella and Friedrich is superb and deserves to be the focus of this story.

Cinderella and the Colonel by K.M. Shea

Personally, I didn’t like the characters of Cinderella or Friedrich as much as I liked Elise and her bros in The Wild Swans. Also, there’s a cohesive universe being developed between these stories that genuinely intrigues me, yet each story stands well on its own. The Timeless Fairytales series delivers retellings that have an idealistic undertone, but the heroes and heroines have teeth, grit, and enough interesting character tweaks to be interesting. In particular, I love retellings that are sweet/clean romance and deliver the happily-ever-after (HEA) ending. I did not intend to go on a retelling kick…but I went on a retelling kick.















Cinderella and the Colonel by K.M. Shea