History and Magic: A Review of A Curse of Roses

Betrothed to King Dinis, the young ruler of Portugal & the Algarves in the thirteenth century, 17-year-old Yzabel, princess of Aragon, hides a terrible secret – a curse that turns the food she eats into roses. Though she is starving, she cannot forget her people, who endure both a famine and a plague. Dinis prohibits her from handing out food because the kingdom’s finances are in desperate shape, but she sneaks out anyway. Through Brites, her maid, she hears about an Enchanted Moura who can take away the curse. She searches for and, with a kiss, frees this Moura, Fatyan, a princess who leapt from a window during a battle a century earlier and was imprisoned in a stone.

Fatyan teaches Yzabel to reframe her power not as a curse but as a miracle she can control by converting roses and other flowers into bread. Through Fatyan, she also learns to question religious teachings founded on principles of male domination, divine punishment, and fear. With her new bounty costing the kingdom nothing, she secretly feeds her people until her husband’s diabolical guard Matias – Brites’s son – follows and confronts her. Added to her sense of peril is her attraction to Fatyan and her lack of attraction to Dinis. In her mind, these are sins that also imperil the kingdom.

In her debut novel Pinguicha adapts a beloved Portuguese legend for contemporary readers, showing how stories from the past can maintain their power to move us and to see ourselves and our history in a new light. Through vivid, sensual details the author situates readers in the world of medieval Portugal and in the magic that surrounds her characters. As is the case today, life and experience has a way of challenging received orthodoxies, and people thrive when they open their minds and hearts to the unexpected. Readers will cheer for Yzabel and Fatyan as their friendship deepens and they become lovers. As for King Dinis, we see this imperfect young leader as multidimensional, not a villain but sincerely concerned for his people; he is willing to listen and cede power to his future mate, though not without struggle and misunderstanding. Suspense, romance, compelling characters, and a unique setting make A Curse of Roses a strong addition to the growing body of folktale retellings for teen and crossover readers.

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