Wicked Marigold

Caroline Carlson

Book - 2024

Princess Marigold--who hadn't yet been born when the remarkable Princess Rosalind was kidnapped--is eleven when the unthinkable happens: her older sister escapes her captivity and comes home. Marigold has always known she's not as good, sweet, or kind as the sister everyone adores, but amid the celebration of Rosalind's return, Marigold realizes something new: if Princess Rosalind is good, then Princess Marigold must be wicked. And there's no place for wickedness in the kingdom. When Marigold tries to find a new place for herself in an evil wizard's fortress, though, the results are disastrous. Before she's even learned to cackle or scowl properly, she gets tangled up in a magical plot to ruin all the Cacophono...us Kingdoms. Is Marigold too wicked to make things right? Or can she--with the help of a kitchen boy, a well-dressed imp, and a grumpy blob of glop--find her own way to restore peace? This endearing fantasy will have princess and anti-princess fans alike chuckling and cheering.

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Subjects
Genres
Fantasy fiction
Humorous fiction
Action and adventure fiction
Published
Somerville, Massachusetts : Candlewick Press 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Caroline Carlson (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
249 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781536230499
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Princess Marigold grew up overshadowed by the memory of her older sister, Rosalind, who was "perfectly good" and universally adored--until she was kidnapped by the wicked wizard Torville. By comparison, Marigold is decidedly not perfect, and after Rosalind miraculously escapes captivity and returns home, the younger princess is all but forgotten amid the celebration. Lashing out, Marigold goes a bit too far, humiliating Rosalind and being dubbed a "wicked child." In the frantic aftermath, she takes the moniker to heart and runs away, seeking refuge in the evil wizard's fortress. What ensues is a legitimately funny series of conflicts, conundrums, and conniptions as Marigold works to ingratiate herself with Torville and prove her wickedness. Carlson seems perfectly at home with this comical fairy tale fantasy, setting a lovely balance between humor and heart, her language as playful as the world she's built. Putting aside the magical mayhem, colorful characters, and surprisingly high stakes, the book ultimately works because at its core is a genuinely moving story of a girl learning about self-worth.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Mechanically minded 11-year-old Marigold, the princess of Imbervale, lives in the shadow of her "perfect" older sister Rosalind, despite Rosalind having been kidnapped by the evil Wizard Torville before Marigold was born. So, when Rosalind escapes captivity and returns to the kingdom, Marigold chafes at being ignored and overlooked. Dubbed a "wicked child" after a party mishap, Marigold takes it to heart and runs away to Wizard Torville's keep, determined to become his apprentice. But her attempts to prove her wickedness backfire, transforming Torville into a sentient--and cranky--pile of glop. With the imminent arrival of assorted evildoers anticipating their regularly scheduled feasting and mayhem, Marigold must find a way to undo her magical handiwork while maintaining the pretense that the wicked wizard is fine, simply indisposed. Carlson (The Door at the End of the World) tempers astute depictions of Marigold's experience in trying to live up to unrealistic expectations with capricious magic, strange monsters, and complex characters. Humorous subversions of traditional fantasy tropes make this an insightful tale of nature versus nurture and good versus evil. Marigold is depicted on the cover with brown skin. Ages 8--12. Agent: Allison Hellegers, Stimola Literary Studio. (July)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Horn Book Review

Eleven-year-old Princess Marigold has grown up in the shadow of her perfect older sister, Rosalind, who was abducted by a wizard long before Marigold was born. When Rosalind miraculously finds her way home, Marigold is ambivalent and rashly decides that she's wicked and doesn't belong in the kingdom. She runs away to a place where she can embrace her so-called wickedness: the fortress of the wizard who held Rosalind captive for fifteen years. She can stay with Wizard Torville and his imp, Pettifog, if she passes a test to prove that she's evil: "I'll give you seven days to do something so vile that even an imp can't deny your wicked nature." Hijinks ensue (including Marigold mistakenly turning Torville into a sentient blob). When a pair of wizards plots to destroy a peace treaty among the kingdoms, Marigold must reckon with what it really means to be wicked. What began as sisterly revenge becomes part of a complicated web of spells that could undo the Cacophonous Kingdoms altogether. Carlson's deftly told story tackles questions of good versus evil and sibling bonds with a cast of oddball creatures and lots of humor. Clever, quirky, and cozy. Grace McKinney BeermannJuly/August 2024 p.122 (c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A displaced princess runs away from home in order to be wicked, only to struggle with undoing a complicated curse. Marigold is nothing like her older sister, Rosalind, who was the perfect princess before she was tragically abducted by the evil Wizard Torville. Intrigued by tales of nefarious characters, such as the Twice-Times Witch, Marigold has always been better at building contraptions than soothing angry dragons with lovely singing. Her life is upended, however, when Rosalind miraculously returns, causing Marigold to feel like she no longer belongs. In a refreshing reversal of classic fairy-tale tropes, Marigold decides that instead of committing to the impossible task of being good, she should dedicate herself to being villainous--and who better to teach her than the wizard who originally kidnapped her sister? But being wicked is harder than it seems, since Marigold doesn't have a natural talent for magic. To make things worse, a miscast curse now threatens her newfound way of life: If Marigold doesn't work with best friend Collin, a kitchen boy, to set things right, her life (and career as a villain!) may be cut short. Full of snappy humor, delightful wordplay, and quirky characters--a tentacled, people-eating creature called the Thing, a spiffy imp, and a reticent blob--this book is a whimsical exploration of belonging and sibling relationships. Characters read white. A witty and engaging anti-fairy-tale adventure. (Fantasy. 8-13) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Marigold came into the world as most ordinary children do, squinting and squalling. This time, the king and queen of Imbervale had taken precautions: every sneak and scoundrel had been swept out of the kingdom; the royal magician had woven a web of protective spells around the palace grounds; and at the moment Marigold was born, six royal guards were appointed to watch over the little princess day and night. Soon enough, however, it became clear to everyone that no evil wizard was going to steal so much as a glance in her direction. Her smile was kind, but it couldn't mend a scraped knee. Her laughter was bright, but it had no obvious effect on any of the plants in the palace gardens. She occasionally sulked. And on the morning of her third birthday, when she wasn't allowed to eat cake for breakfast, she drew in her breath, stuck out her lower lip, and threw such a tantrum that all six of her royal guards resigned on the spot. "I don't think," said a nursemaid, slipping cotton wool into her ears, "that Princess Rosalind ever howled quite so loudly." Marigold grew up hearing all about Rosalind. The nursemaids talked about her often. So did the gardeners, the cooks, the stable hands, the royal steward, the farmers in their fields, and the shopkeepers in the market square, each of whom seemed to remember a different precious detail about the sister Marigold had never met. Some evenings at bedtime, King Godfrey and Queen Amelia would tell Marigold how Rosalind had once nursed an injured fox kit back to health or about the time that her sweet songs had soothed the temper of the famously irritable Imbervale dragon. Marigold preferred the evenings when they would read to her from storybooks, even if the king and queen insisted on skipping past all the most interesting tales -- ​those about Gentleman Northwinds, who conjured up the chilling breeze that first turned the Cacophonous Kingdoms against one another, or the Twice--Times Witch, who took two journeys into the demonic realms where most humans didn't dare to travel even once, returning each time with an imp to help her cast her wicked charms. Once Marigold was old enough to read on her own, those were the stories she turned to late at night when she was supposed to be sleeping. It wasn't easy for Marigold to do only the things she was supposed to do. This was especially true in Imbervale Palace, which was full of twisting back passageways and long--forgotten staircases that Marigold wasn't strictly allowed to use. She explored them all, of course. She even found a loose panel in the wall of the Green Gallery, where she could eavesdrop on her parents' important royal business. When she got bored of listening to advisers and undersecretaries filing through with complaints about the latest disturbances caused by the other Cacophonous Kingdoms -- ​a scourge of mosquitoes sent from Whitby, for example, or a headache spell from Tiskaree dusting the market square -- ​Marigold would sneak away, shimmy out a window that no one ever remembered to lock, and clamber onto the sloping roof of the east tower. The rooftop was Marigold's favorite secret spot in the palace. If the weather was clear, she could see all the way to the wildwood, a vast tangle of trees at the kingdom's edge. Like the palace roof and the Green Gallery, the wildwood was a place where she was not allowed, but unlike the roof or the gallery, it was hard to reach without being caught. Soldiers from Imbervale sometimes rode off in that direction, searching for a path to Wizard Torville's fortress, but none of them knew quite where the wizard lived, and paths through the wildwood weren't so easily found. "I bet I could find a path, though," Marigold whispered to her best friend, Collin, as they stood in the courtyard one day, watching another bedraggled and unsuccessful group of soldiers return to the palace. "You probably could," Collin agreed, "and I'd come with you. We could be two brave heroes, riding through the trees and fighting dragons!" Collin, who worked in the palace as a kitchen boy, loved storybooks, too, but his favorite tales were different from Marigold's. Occasionally, Marigold was caught doing things she shouldn't. Once, while she eavesdropped on the royal steward explaining to King Godfrey that the kingdom of Hartswood had hired a wizard to levitate every pair of shoes in the village twenty feet in the air, she sneezed loudly three times in a row. She hoped no one had heard, but the steward himself -- ​a man in a trim blue suit who was often unimpressed by Marigold -- ​marched across the Green Gallery, pushed aside the loose wall panel, and looked down at her, more unimpressed than ever. Marigold glowered back at the steward, mostly because she was too ashamed to look at her father. King Godfrey was probably scratching his beard just below the left ear, as he always did when he felt uncomfortable. "Marigold, my love," said the king, "please come out of there." Marigold crawled out of her hiding space and brushed the cobwebs from her dress. "Hello, Papa," she said. "I'm sorry." King Godfrey sighed. "I don't suppose," he said, "that you happened to end up inside the wall by accident?" Marigold shook her head. She wished it had been an accident; then her father wouldn't have sounded so disappointed. "I wanted to hear about the shoes," she admitted. "Why did Hartswood make them all float in the air?" "Because Hartswood," said King Godfrey, pulling Marigold onto his lap, "is a place where no one has ever learned to act with decency. The queen herself hires wizards to curse those of us who've done nothing wrong!" He seemed much happier to be scolding Hartswood than he had been scolding Marigold. "And the other eight kingdoms are just as bad -- ​always causing some kind of uproar, always bending the rules as far as they'll stretch. That sort of behavior might be all right in the wildwood and the wastes, but it shouldn't be allowed in any respectable kingdom. We certainly don't allow it in Imbervale." He turned Marigold's face toward his own. "Especially not from a princess of Imbervale. Do you understand?" Marigold thought she did. "I'll be good," she promised. King Godfrey kissed her on the forehead. "Good," he pronounced, as if she already were. Excerpted from Wicked Marigold by Caroline Carlson All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.