A modern Sleeping Beauty determined to rewrite her story finds purpose in her life’s curse.
Harrow’s version of the sleeping princess is from Ohio. She’s not actually Sleeping Beauty, but she considers herself a kindred spirit of sorts. “It was my own shitty story made mythic and grand and beautiful. A princess cursed at birth. A sleep that never ends. A dying girl who refused to die." But Zin’s curse is a bit more permanent. She has a disease called Generalized Roseville Malady and no one with it has lived to see the age of 22. Zin has just turned 21, and not even a Sleeping Beauty–themed party thrown by her best friend, Charm, can distract her from impending eternal sleep. That is, until she pricks her finger on the needle of the party-decor spinning wheel and is thrown into a parallel reality with a more standard-model Sleeping Beauty named Primrose. Given that Zin has found herself in a strange place lacking modern medicine, you’d think she’d be quick to get home. But not so—despite pleas from Charm over many texts which are inexplicably still received—because Zin has just found a purpose beyond waiting for her last breath: “I’ve fallen out of my own story and into one that might have a happy ending.” Zin’s arrival in Prim’s world prevented Prim from pricking herself on her spinning wheel, and if her curse can be altered, what about Zin’s? The one-dimensional world of Prim’s Disney-like universe sets the tone for a rather one-dimensional quest to alter fate, but themes of female friendship, female strength, and female independence leave good feels behind, not to mention some laugh-out-loud bits. The short length, brisk pace, and pop-culture references definitely make this young-adult friendly, though anyone who enjoys a sarcastic first-person narrator can take this for a spin.
This fairy tale–superhero movie mashup is pure entertainment.