From /tmp/sf.3694 Sun Nov 8 23:04:09 1992 Xref: lysator.liu.se rec.arts.sf.reviews:6 soc.culture.jewish:2319 Path: lysator.liu.se!kth.se!sunic!mcsun!uunet!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!ames!ig!dont-reply-to-paths From: ecl@mtgzy.att.com (Evelyn C Leeper +1 908 957 2070) Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.reviews,soc.culture.jewish Subject: BRIAR ROSE by Jane Yolen Message-ID: <9211061636.AA20939@presto.ig.com> Date: 8 Nov 92 01:45:57 GMT Sender: mcb@presto.ig.com Followup-To: rec.arts.sf.written Lines: 56 Approved: mcb@presto.ig.com (rec.arts.sf.reviews moderator) BRIAR ROSE by Jane Yolen A book review by Evelyn C. Leeper Copyright 1992 Evelyn C. Leeper Thank you, Jane Yolen. I thanked you last year for THE DEVIL'S ARITHMETIC, a young adult novel in which a young girl travels back through time to the Holocaust and comes to a better understanding of her heritage and her family. And now I thank you for BRIAR ROSE, in which a woman tries to find out the secret of her grandmother's past, and why her grandmother was so obsessed with the fairy tale Briar Rose (a.k.a. Sleeping Beauty). For as long as Rebecca can remember, her grandmother Gemma has told Rebecca and her sisters the tale of Briar Rose (which we know as Sleeping Beauty). But more than that, she has told them that SHE is Briar Rose. Now that Gemma has died, Rebecca is driven to find out who her grandmother really was and why she told this story. Even from the beginning, Rebecca discovers that much of what she believed about her family history isn't true. Eventually her search takes her to Poland and the truth about the dark time of the Holocaust. Yolen has done a very good job in describing a Jewish family and its history, but what is worth noting is that she has not ignored the other aspects of the Nazi regime during that period. One of the primary sources of information for Rebecca when she travels to Poland is a man who was imprisoned for his homosexuality. And the history involves other groups persecuted as well. Yolen manages this without minimizing anyone's suffering--it is not a contest of what group suffered more, but a look at the people who suffered and how they often worked together against the horror. In my review of Marge Piercy's HE, SHE, AND IT, I talked about how Piercy told a 16th Century legend, both in its own time and then as a re- telling in a near-future time, so that we could see that what seemed like just an old story was still very relevant to the issues that face us today. In BRIAR ROSE, Yolen takes a fairy tale rather than a legend, but then does the same thing: shows us that it would be a mistake to write it off as just another story--shows us that even a fairy tale may have much underlying truth in what it says. I have not read the other stories in the "Fairy Tale" series (of which this is one), so I don't know if that is the usual approach, but I highly recommend this book. %A Jane Yolen %T Briar Rose %I Tor %C New York %D 1992 %G ISBN 0-312-85135-9 %O hardback, US$17.95 %P 190pp %S Fairy Tale Series Evelyn C. Leeper | +1 908 957 2070 | att!mtgzy!ecl or ecl@mtgzy.att.com rec/arts/sf/reviews