List Books Concering Princess of the Silver Woods (The Princesses of Westfalin Trilogy #3)
Original Title: | Princess of the Silver Woods |
ISBN: | 1599906465 (ISBN13: 9781599906461) |
Edition Language: | English URL http://www.jessicadaygeorge.com/Books/PrincessOfTheSilverWoods/default.aspx |
Series: | The Princesses of Westfalin Trilogy #3 |
Jessica Day George
Hardcover | Pages: 326 pages Rating: 4.06 | 11574 Users | 1111 Reviews

Describe Containing Books Princess of the Silver Woods (The Princesses of Westfalin Trilogy #3)
Title | : | Princess of the Silver Woods (The Princesses of Westfalin Trilogy #3) |
Author | : | Jessica Day George |
Book Format | : | Hardcover |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 326 pages |
Published | : | December 11th 2012 by Bloomsbury USA Children's Books |
Categories | : | Fantasy. Young Adult. Fairy Tales. Romance. Retellings |
Relation Conducive To Books Princess of the Silver Woods (The Princesses of Westfalin Trilogy #3)
When Petunia, the youngest of King Gregor's twelve dancing daughters, is invited to visit an elderly friend in the neighboring country of Westfalin, she welcomes the change of scenery. But in order to reach Westfalin, Petunia must pass through a forest where strange two-legged wolves are rumored to exist. Wolves intent on redistributing the wealth of the noble citizens who have entered their territory. But the bandit-wolves prove more rakishly handsome than truly dangerous, and it's not until Petunia reaches her destination that she realizes the kindly grandmother she has been summoned to visit is really an enemy bent on restoring an age-old curse. The stories of Red Riding Hood and Robin Hood get a twist as Petunia and her many sisters take on bandits, grannies, and the new King Under Stone to end their family curse once and for all.Rating Containing Books Princess of the Silver Woods (The Princesses of Westfalin Trilogy #3)
Ratings: 4.06 From 11574 Users | 1111 ReviewsWrite Up Containing Books Princess of the Silver Woods (The Princesses of Westfalin Trilogy #3)
This story certainly started off well! I was captivated and wanted to know more about the spunky heroine and her adventures. The cover was eye-catching (without being cliche) and I loved the fantastic flowing red cape. There was one aspect that made me grimace: love at first sight. Ugh.Usually the whole oh-I-fell-in-love-at-first-sight thing kinda bothers me. (What am I doing using that flimsy word "kinda" when I really mean, "totally infuriates"?) And initially I was annoyed because this novel
No where near as good as the first two in the series.

Westfalins been calm enough for a few years. Many of the twelve princesses got married or betrothed thanks to the exchange program. Petunia, the youngest girl, is one of the only sisters still at home. Shes a bit restlessshe loves her sisters, but feels a desperate need for oxygen and adventure of her own.Adventure finds Petunia while shes off to visit the grandmotherly Grand Duchess Volaskaya, a Russakan royal who married a Westfalian baron and settled in that landand dashing Prince Grigori,
Read This Review & More Like It On My Blog! This is a review for the third and final novel in the series about Twelve Dancing Princesses, but what I say here about Princess of the Silver Woods holds true for all of the books. I so wanted to love these - I had heard great things and excitedly requested this as an ARC, even without reading the first two. Sadly, I was confused, bored, uninvolved from the very start, so I DNF'd 50 pages in. A week or so later, the first two went on sale for
I really enjoyed this series and have been looking forward to this final book for a long time. This story follows Petunia, the youngest of the dancing princesses. I liked Petunia, she was pretty feisty. Her older sisters tend to baby her and she is tired of being babies and overlooked. She really comes into her own in this one. Our hero in this book, Oliver, was likable. I think I liked Galen and Christian a bit more, but he still had his own charm. I guess he came across a little young to me.
*desperately wants to stab something with knitting needles*To say this book was disappointing would definitely be an understatement. It started off well enough, but I quickly lost interest after the first 50 pages. Basically, the only reason I finished it was so I could say I finished the series. (Of which I actually enjoyed the first two books.)With that being said, there were a FEW things I liked. *cracks knuckles and begins review* Lovely Things: - The fairytale aspects. I really liked the
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