Selected Product: | The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty Paperback Author: A. N. Roquelaure, Anne Rice Publisher: Plume Release Date: 1999-05-01 ISBN-10: 0452281423 ISBN-13: 9780452281424 List Price: $15.00 Average Customer Rating: | | Enchanted: Erotic Bedtime Stories For Women ISBN-10: 0373605099 ISBN-13: 9780373605095 List Price:$13.95 Story of O ISBN-10: 0345301110 ISBN-13: 9780345301116 List Price:$7.99 Beauty's Release: The Conclusion of the Classic Erotic Trilogy of Sleeping Beauty ISBN-10: 0452281458 ISBN-13: 9780452281455 List Price:$15.00 Exit to Eden ISBN-10: 0061233498 ISBN-13: 9780061233494 List Price:$13.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty by A. N. Roquelaure, Anne Rice (ISBN-10: 0452281423, ISBN-13: 9780452281424). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty by A. N. Roquelaure, Anne Rice (ISBN-10: 0452281423, ISBN-13: 9780452281424). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Rice writing as A. N. Roquelaure. In the traditional folk tale "Sleeping Beauty," the spell cast upon the lovely young princess and everyone in her castle can only be broken by the kiss of a Prince. Anne Rice's retelling of the Beauty story probes the unspoken implications of this lush, suggestive tale by exploring its undeniable connection to sexual desire. Spank me if I ever open this book again! | Customer Rating: | | This book is the most repetitious book I have ever not completed reading. It takes a classic love story and turns it into ridiculous tale of bondage and punishment over and over and over again. It would have liked it better if Sleeping Beauty would have ate a bushel of apples and went into a irreversible coma on about the 3rd page. Oh, did I mention that this book is repetitious? | A brilliant concept stripped of characters and reduced to repetition, the book fails. Not recommended | Customer Rating: | The Prince wakens Beauty from her century of sleep--and then, as his reward for saving the castle, takes her as his prize. He leads Beauty back to his kingdom, where foreign princes and princesses are trained to be sexual slaves, willingly submitting to the most "depraved" desires. The fairy tale premise strips the story of characterization and justifies an unbelievable land where Beauty and a hundred other royals undergo public and state-sanctioned humiliating display, oft-repeated spankings, and sexual encounters which never require consent. The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty has a few darkly erotic moments but quickly disintegrates into repetition, and lacks character growth which might grant it some sense of purpose. I do not plan to read the sequels, and I do not recommend this book.
Initially, the premise of Claiming appears to have beautiful simplicity, but this simplicity is its biggest downfall. An untouched Beauty, woken from endless sleep into vivid life by a Prince--the concept leads easily into sexual overtones. However, fairy tales are brief and reiterative, and trade character for archetype: the sleeping Beauty, the warrior Prince. Rice maintains both aspects. She cannot sustain the simple concept over a novel's length, and the story quickly becomes repetitious: humiliation, spankings, sex, humiliation, spanking, sex. Beauty believes that each instance is worse than the last, but it's hard for the reader to agree. Not much varies besides the order of events, and sometimes a slave is tied up for a while or there's a bit of sodomy, but other than that the book drives in the same circle until the end. Beauty and Prince have little characterization outside of their titles, and while Beauty eventually encounters characters with names and the ghost of an identity, on the whole characterization is kept to a minimum. Without characterization, there is no character growth and no one for the reader to identify with and care about, stripping the story of any sense of purpose.
To be fair, the whole book is not a cycle of simple repetition. Claiming has a few moments of dark eroticism, where the encounter is conceived in such a way that it is appealing to the sympathetic mind (which is to say that the content tends towards idealized sexual violence not unlike BDSM, and may not suit all readers). Such moments, however, are the exception rather than the rule. The number of spankings, each one just like the one before, is so exaggerated that one begins to wonder if Rice has a fetish. On a less humorous note, the variations on sex and punishment tread on the edge of objectionable--not because the two can't be intermixed, but because Rice intermixes them without stopping for consent. To a certain extent, the fairy tale setting justifies this: the Prince's kingdom is an absurd land stripped of characters and run on fetishized sex, wholly unbelievable and therefore excused from rational details like reasonable doubt and sexual consent. But the setting can't excuse the fact that the book begins when the Prince rapes Beauty to wake her and then orders her into slavery against her will. Nevermind the fact that Beauty is forever aroused by her trails--the fantasy of the entire book is still tainted.
There is ample room in literature for erotic fairy tales--especially for eroticism that reveals or revels in the darkness of human nature. (The Bloody Chamber by Angela Carter is a breathtaking example of such, and I highly recommend it.) The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty, bogged down by blank-faced characters and dozen of identical spankings, plummets where it should soar. The result is a novel with only moments of erotic interest, never thought-provoking or intriguing but instead unbelievable, repetitious, and slightly unsettling. Rice cannot maintain the concept over a mere 250 pages, and I doubt that the two sequels are any better--I don't plan to read them. I was disappointed by this book, and I don't recommend it. | Classic Erotica | Customer Rating: | | Excellent retelling of a favorite fairy tale. This book is a classic in the erotica genre, and I would highly reommend to others who are fans of Anne Rice and her particular writing style. | Enough with the spankings already!! | Customer Rating: | I have read a great deal of Anne Rice over the years, but in no way was I prepared for her Sleeping Beauty series! As in all of Rice's works, the language was intelligent and wonderfully descriptive, but unlike others... the storyline was a little dull.
I have always loved fairy tale retellings, so I was anxious to see what Rice would do with it.... I found out rather quickly that the story had very little to do with the fairytale and mostly just focused on the setting. Even the main characters (aside from the Prince and Beauty) were pretty far removed from any fairytale rendition, not to mention pretty one dimensional.
I also found that Rice spent a lot of time with the spanking, and I wonder if she took anytime at all to research BDSM to find other more interesting activities associated with it.... I mean, if you are planning on writing an entire book where that is the norm, shouldn't you be a little more up to speed on what other things that entails???
Although I am fairly open minded about my reading choices, this book included just a little too much shock and not enough substance for me. | disappointed and disturbed- NOT was I was looking for | Customer Rating: | I picked up this book because I was looking for some erotica and I am fan of Anne Rice's other work, however I was extremely disappointed. As other reviewers have said, the "spanking" was so redundant it was annoying, the plot was non-existent and the narrative was only so-so. Most importantly I was NOT aware when I bought this novel that it was so strongly S&M, nonconsensual acts etc. Some people may enjoy those fantasizes(as fantasizes ONLY) however, pain, the threat of infliction of pain and explict descriptions of forced sexual activity do NOT arose me in the slightest. Unless you are a fan of S&M I do not suggest you purchase this book. |
|