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The Princess Bride

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What happens when the most beautiful girl in the world marries the handsomest prince of all time and he turns out to be...well...a lot less than the man of her dreams?

As a boy, William Goldman claims, he loved to hear his father read the S. Morgenstern classic, The Princess Bride. But as a grown-up he discovered that the boring parts were left out of good old Dad's recitation, and only the "good parts" reached his ears.

Now Goldman does Dad one better. He's reconstructed the "Good Parts Version" to delight wise kids and wide-eyed grownups everywhere.

What's it about? Fencing. Fighting. True Love. Strong Hate. Harsh Revenge. A Few Giants. Lots of Bad Men. Lots of Good Men. Five or Six Beautiful Women. Beasties Monstrous and Gentle. Some Swell Escapes and Captures. Death, Lies, Truth, Miracles, and a Little Sex.

In short, it's about everything.

429 pages, Paperback

First published September 1, 1973

18.6k people are currently reading
875k people want to read

About the author

William Goldman

84books2,580followers
Goldman grew up in a Jewish family in Highland Park, Illinois, a Chicago suburb, and obtained a BA degree at Oberlin College in 1952 and an MA degree at Columbia University in 1956.His brother was the late James Goldman, author and playwright.

William Goldman had published five novels and had three plays produced on Broadway before he began to write screenplays. Several of his novels he later used as the foundation for his screenplays.

In the 1980s he wrote a series of memoirs looking at his professional life on Broadway and in Hollywood (in one of these he famously remarked that "Nobody knows anything"). He then returned to writing novels. He then adapted his novel The Princess Bride to the , which marked his re-entry into screenwriting.

Goldman won two Academy Awards: an Academy Award for Writing Original Screenplay for Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, and an Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay for All the President's Men. He also won two Edgar Awards, from the Mystery Writers of America, for Best Motion Picture Screenplay: for Harper in 1967, and for Magic (adapted from his own 1976 novel) in 1979.

Goldman died in New York City on November 16, 2018, due to complications from colon cancer and pneumonia. He was eighty-seven years old.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 28,513 reviews
Profile Image for Chris.
341 reviews1,088 followers
February 26, 2009
If you haven't read this book, then all I can tell you is to go out, get it, and read it. Now. Don't bother with the rest of this review, you'll thank me later. It has:

Fencing.
Fighting.
Torture.
Poison.
True Love.
Hate.
Revenge.
Giants.
Hunters.
Good men.
Bad men.
Beautifulest ladies.
Snakes.
Spiders.
Beasts of all natures and descriptions.
Pain.
Death.
Brave men.
Coward men.
Strongest men.
Chases.
Escapes.
Lies.
Truths.
Passion.
Miracles.

For a start.

It's one of the greatest love/action/revenge stories ever abridged by a modern author. Well, it seems that Mr. Goldman felt that the original story, as written by the immortal S. Morganstern, was a little too dry for public consumption, as well as damaging to treasured childhood memories, so he went through it and put together this "good parts" version, and the world is a better place for it. [1:]

Of course, the big gag is that there never was an original version of the book. There never was an S. Morganstern, the greatest of the Florinese writers. Goldman's father may have read books to him as a child, but he never read this book to him. The entire thing is a fiction, beginning to end, but Goldman sells it really well. He tells the tale of how he blossomed as a boy - going from being a sports-obsessed disappointment to a ravenous bookworm, all thanks to this book. He talks about trying to give the same gift to his son, who manages to make it through one chapter before giving up in exhaustion. He talks about the great shock of discovering that his father had done something utterly brilliant - he had skipped the dull bits and left the exciting parts intact.

Knowing that all of this is false certainly doesn't detract from the story. It's a story about a story, and the effect that a story can have on a young mind. Or any mind, for that matter. It's about how stories can teach us lessons that only later we understand - such as how life is not fair - and how stories can change us in ways that we never expected. It's about our relationship with fiction, and with the world around us. In his fictional childhood, Goldman learned more about the world from the process of watching the story unfold than he did from the story itself. And so this book is a story about stories. The actual story is just bonus.

Which brings me, of course, to the film. Let me say that this is one of the very, very few instances where I will put the movie up on par with the book. 99.9999 repeating percent of the time, the book is better than the movie. This is one instance where they are equal in nearly every measure. I'm sure a lot of this has to do with the fact that Goldman wrote the screenplay for the film, so not only is the story intact, but a great deal of the dialogue is almost verbatim from the book. It was gold in print and gold on the screen. The hardest part about reading the book is trying not to hear Andre the Giant, Christopher Guest, Robin Wright and all the other fine actors and actresses in your head as you read.

So, whether you read the book or see the movie, you're in for a treat. And as you read, just remember the books that molded you into who you are today. Think about the stories that taught you life's lessons before life got around to doing it. Think about them and appreciate them, and remember that every book is a lesson, one way or another....

[1:] This is a fun type of meta-fiction, writers writing autobiographically about writing about books that never existed. I find it interesting that The Princess Bride can sit comfortably shoulder-to-shoulder with House of Leaves.
Profile Image for Emily May.
2,160 reviews317k followers
May 20, 2014
It's amazing that I've never found time to read this book before. I have seen the movie, but it was years ago and I only really remember the one thing that everyone remembers:



The real strength of this book is that is just ticks every box imaginable. It's a fairy tale, full of action, romance and revenge, and it has that timeless quality that the best fairy tales seem to carry. It was published in the 1970s but it feels like it should be a thousand years old, passed down from generation to generation. It's non-stop adventure, comedy gold and full of some of the most memorable characters I've ever had the pleasure of reading about.

Goldman's writing style for this novel works so surprisingly well. For one, it's such an unusual idea to write a retelling of a story by a fictional author - Goldman claims his father read him the S. Morgenstern classic as a child and then proceeds to tell us the "abridged" version with all the good parts. It's strange how well his constant sidenotes actually add to the story, rather than take us out of it. I think maybe it's the little kids inside most readers who remember the magic of being read a story as a child. Because while this is a fantasy story with magic and princesses, it's also a bittersweet tale about how a father introduced his son to the world of stories.

And I found it hilarious. I want you to know how rare it is for me to find a book that successfully combines silly humour with dramatic action and adventure. I've struggled with authors like Terry Pratchett because I felt the humour took away any serious investment I may have had in the story. But this book quietly mocks itself on every page and it works so well. At first I wondered if I would be rolling my eyes at the whole notion of Buttercup as "the most beautiful woman in the world", but Goldman rolls his eyes for us with the comic portrayal of obsession with beauty and true love.

The characters here are so rich and vivid that it's hard to imagine that they don't exist somewhere in an alternate fantasy world. Everyone remembers and loves Inigo Montoya and the pretty-faced Westley, but I was surprised by Buttercup. My memory of the movie seems to have done her a disservice because I remembered her as a typical, beautiful princess. But no, Buttercup is fierce and brave. She might be silly and naive at the start but she grows and develops with age. She doesn't sit back and let things happen to her, which I like.

Honestly, this was a delight to read. I can't believe I waited so long.

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Profile Image for emma.
2,422 reviews84.3k followers
September 11, 2024
This book has, as you may know:

Fencing. Fighting. Torture. Poison. True love. Hate. Revenge. Giants. Hunters. Bad men. Good men. Beautifulest ladies. Snakes. Spiders. Beasts of all natures and descriptions. Pain. Death. Brave men. Coward men. Strongest men. Chases. Escapes. Lies. Truths. Passion. Miracles.

And if you like any of those things, or all of those things, or several of them or none of them, or if you find any of them exciting, or compelling, or curiosity-inducing at all, then you simply have to read it.

This is one of those extraordinarily rare cases when the film adaptation sometimes prompts people to say the uncommon phrase 鈥淭he movie is better than the book.鈥� Those people are wrong, but less wrong than those who usually say it.

The movie is funny, and exciting, and brilliantly casted, and truer to the book than anyone has any real right to expect (thank you, William Goldman, for adapting your own work).

But here鈥檚 a by no means exhaustive list of what it鈥檚 missing:
- the full extent of the author鈥檚 wit
- character backstories so rich you鈥檒l feel their trials and tribulations intensely
- a fictional history so convincing that I spent most of my childhood (and some of my adolescence) believing that Europe included long-warring countries called Florin and Guilder
- masterful themes on the meaning of storytelling and truth in literature
- the chance to be awestruck by a book over and over and over again

So yes, you should watch the movie. Sure. It鈥檚 great.

But more than that, you should read the book.

(I鈥檒l even say it鈥檚 okay if you鈥檝e seen the movie already. Your fun won鈥檛 be spoiled in the slightest.)

Bottom line: I truly and sincerely pity anyone who has not read and has no intention of reading The Princess Bride.

It鈥檚 the best thing in the world, after cough drops.


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this book is a dweam...wiffin a dweam......

(weview to come)

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me, rereading this book? inconceivable
Profile Image for seak.
440 reviews466 followers
November 16, 2021
Hey, I have a booktube channel (youtube for book reviews) and I do video reviews for books like this one, epic fantasy, science fiction, media related to them, and more.

First of all, anyone who's rated this less than 5 stars is just wrong, very wrong. I know this because I was recently instated "Master of all Opinions" where mine is the most rightest. :)

The Structure

I guess the real place to start with this book is with its structure. You may have noticed that the actual title is - The Princess Bride: S. Morgenstern's Classic Tale of True Love and High Adventure: The "Good Parts" Version Abridged by William Goldman.

Whew. That's a mouthful.

But that's also the genius of this book. You see, S. Morgenstern's "Classic" doesn't actually exist, only this abridged, "Good Parts" version, created wholly by William Goldman. This may not be the first time I expound upon the genius of this narrative.

The Princess Bride begins much like the movie. William Goldman gets sick and his father comes in to read him this story. Only in the book, we don't jump right into the story, we go to the future of Goldman's life where he talks about things that actually happened in his life, but also some thing's he's made up.

For instance, Goldman talks about writing for , which he did do. But he also talks about his fictional psychotherapist wife (that took some research).

Finally, about 40 or so pages in, we get to the actual story. And it's almost exactly like the movie, or at least I should say that nothing is left out of the book that's in the movie (except the performances, but I'll get there). And that's how it should be, Goldman did write the screenplay.

During this time, Goldman explains that the book is actually extremely boring in parts and while he was young, his father only read the "good parts." Instead he skipped the pages and pages of explanations of Florintine (the actual story taking place in the fictional Florin) ancestry, which is also explained as Morgenstern being satiric.

The story begins and just like in the movie, there are multiple interruptions, but in the book they're made as editorial notes. Again, this is where the genius of this setup comes in. He's able to comment on his own story, add things that the story alone cannot do, even point out things he finds odd...in his own story.

An example of Goldman pointing out what he finds odd is that throughout the story (not the editorial notes), there are always interruptions in the form of parentheticals. For instance:

"...she examined herself pore by pore in her mirror. (This was after mirrors.)"

"'I'll leave the lad an acre in my will,' Buttercup's father was fond of saying. (They had acres then.)"

"Then, rather than continue the argument (they had arguments then too), they would both turn on their daughter."

These were found throughout the book and always made me laugh, but Goldman has an editorial note explaining that if the parentheticals bother you, you should skip them.

The "Good Parts" and The Movie

If you're like me, you've seen the movie so many times that you can quote just about everything, and I'm terrible at quoting movies.

The movie itself follows the book excellently and even exceeds the book in many ways. It's so very rare, but the already excellent characters such as Fezzik and the Man in Black are almost across the board improved upon in the movie.

I mean, how do you get any better than Andre the Giant and Billy Crystal's performance of Miracle Max? I was reading the exact same words that Crystal says, but it was almost flat in the book, whereas in the film, Crystal makes them come alive.

But the benefit of the book is, as usual, the fact that you get inside the character's heads and backstory. Before each of the famous "fight" scenes between The Man in Black and Buttercup's three kidnappers, we are let in on the backstory of each. These are great.

We see what actually happened with Inigo and why he seeks revenge and becomes the greatest swordsman in the world...well,[Spoiler Alert] almost. We find out that Fezzik is even big for a Turk (who average 15 pound babies) and how he was a competitive fighter who had to learn how to lose to make the crowd like him. And best of all, it goes into his obsession with RHYMING!

Then there's Vizzini , the self-proclaimed genius and orchestrator of this most unstoppable team of the world's best.

Yet another thing I loved about this book, Goldman's obsessed with numbers and lists. Buttercup starts out as not even in the top 20 of the most beautiful women in the world, but quickly jumps to the top. Prince Humperdink is the best hunter in the world. Buttercup and Westley's kiss is better than the top 5 kisses ever had.

This just adds to the epic and fairytale feeling of the story, it can't get more noble than the best of the best, but at the same time, the whole numbering thing is just another comical aspect of Goldman's writing: the fact that people would even have a list or the ability to measure such things. I love it.

Do I need more examples of the genius of this work? The wit, the charm, the characters that are larger than life, this is easily one of my favorite books of all time.

5 out of 5 Stars (This wasn't even a debate)

Buttercup's Baby [The extra short story included in my edition of The Pricess Bride]

Non-spoiler, tl;dr review: skip it, don't mess with the classic story.
73 reviews
July 24, 2007
I am one of the few people in the world who does not think the book is better than the movie here. There is an undercurrent of bitterness in this book that I find off-putting. I am given to understand by a friend that those elements--i.e., the autobiographical stuff in Goldman's own persona--are actually fictional. But I found that they soured my enjoyment of the story they framed. I couldn't enjoy the writing of a writer who seemed as misanthropic and hateful as Goldman came off to me. TPB is still a great book--better than three stars, but I couldn't quite bring myself to give it four.

Stick to the movie. It has the opposite problem, but you can always fast forward through the saccharine Fred Savage bits.
Profile Image for Anne.
4,591 reviews70.6k followers
February 10, 2024
I was introduced to The Princess Bride through the movie.
And I cannot be the only one.

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Here's the thing: it's basically exactly like the movie but with one notable difference.
It's not Grandpa Columbo reading the book to his sick grandson, it's narrated by the author who is editing a book by "S. Morgenstern" to take out all the boring parts so his son will read it.
See, this was his favorite book as a child because his father read it to him. But what he didn't realize at the time was that his father had skipped over all the dull political satire that Morgenstern had written about his native land, Florin.

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And it's Goldman's running dialogue throughout the book that really makes this the classic that it is, as he fully immerses himself in Morgenstern's tale.
The rest (minus a few minor things) you already know. Or I would assume you already know because WHO HASN鈥橳 seen The Princess Bride movie?!

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Recommended for anyone who loves adventure, swordfights, villains, revenge, friendship, magic, and of course鈥rue love.

description

The End.
72 reviews585 followers
November 30, 2022
To help recuperate the sick child (Author William Goldman), the old father reads out the story of 鈥�The Princess Bride鈥� by S. Morgenstern to him. Years later, obsessed with the book, determined to procure a copy of it, extensively rummaging through bookshops, William Goldman finally ends up finding an ancient copy of it.
He eventually realizes that his father read out only the 鈥�good parts of the story鈥�, and resorts to opting for the fictional route of writing the abridged story of 鈥淭he Princess Bride鈥�.

Well going through the extended introduction was wee tedious and boring for me, so I skimmed through it.
I was assiduously seeking to whet my appetite for fantasy by seizing the main adventure story of Buttercup and not the story of the rhyme and reason for abridgment by the author.

Additionally, the author kept barging with his POV throughout the story, giving a feel of a book within a book, which kept distracting me from my dreamland sporadically, which I didn鈥檛 hold in high regard. So, docked 1.5 stars!

The main plot summary of the adventure story (without spoilers)-
Not considering herself as one of the most beautiful females, Buttercup, is sluggish to comb her hair and isn鈥檛 concerned about her image. This comes across as her most salient feature as she is not proud and haughty about her beauty like most of the other females. In short, she wears the image of a tomboy. No matter what Buttercup commands the Farm Boy, Westley, to do, he simply answers, "As you wish." Buttercup develops feelings for him and eventually, both are in love in no time. Both are extremely simple, and the love that bridges the two is based on the purest of intentions and not on money or beauty!
Westley leaves on a quest to seek better fortune, while promising Buttercup of his return to marry her.
Buttercup swears to be faithful but is devastated to learn that Wesley's ship has been attacked by the infamous Dread Pirate Roberts, who presumes him dead. After 5 years, she agrees to marry Prince Humperdinck even though she still loves Wesley. Prince Humperdinck is the inverse of Buttercup and Westley. He is arrogant and narcissistic. Concerned with appearances, Buttercup is just a mere possession for him!
Before the wedding, Buttercup is kidnaped by three bandits- a Sicilian boss named Vizzini, a giant named Fezzik, and a Spanish swordsman named Inigo who is seeking to avenge his father's murder, what follows ahead is a fast-paced thrilling adventure. Read it for yourself and explore! 馃槉

I agree with William鈥檚 father's decision to close the book on a 鈥�happily ever after鈥�, by offering a conclusive rest to the readers after traversing through an action-packed adventure!

The story professes the power of love that is pure, honest and true, untouched with malice and is unadulterated.


Despite many years apart, Buttercup and Westley remain connected through the bonds of love. Even death cannot separate those who experience true love!

I would have given 5-stars to this adventure laden taut fairy-tale story but docked 1.5 stars due to the intermittent sporadic appearance of the parallel pragmatic story by Willian Goldman and his POV, which muted my fantasy-reading experience.
The characters are well-fleshed out and are bound to stay with the readers for a long time! An adventure and action-packed 3.5 stars drizzled to this wonderful story inundated with the power of true love and innocence, which starts with 鈥�as you wish鈥� and closes with 鈥�so do I鈥� 馃槉


NB-I haven鈥檛 watched the movie adaptation of 鈥淭he Princess Bride鈥� and have only read the book, so not aware of the differences in the execution of the plot-line!

The exposition of the theme of the trials and tribulations of true love came as a welcome lull for me.
Buttercup and Westley proved that love is not idealized, but is lasting. Buttercup never ceases to love Westley even while fearing him dead and even though she bickers with him after finding out he is alive. Westley stays loyal to Buttercup throughout! Their love for each other was overtly-cute!
Profile Image for Nilufer Ozmekik.
2,921 reviews57.2k followers
October 6, 2021
Oh boy! I needed to brighten my darker than ink mood ASAP!So choosing this book was the best decision I had lately!
Some books might be sold at the drugstores as antidepressants to soothe your anxiety, heal your soul!

This is truly one of them! A brilliant satire! An epic, heart pounding romance! Story in another story premise! An exciting, deliciously riveting action packed adventure! And one of the most brilliant movie adaptation of mid-80鈥檚 ! And please listen to its audiobook because sweetest, amazing director of the movie Rob Reiner is the narrator of the book and his acting skills help a lot to savor each moment perfectly!
I鈥檓 giving five gazillion stars! I Keep smiling,smiling and smiling!

Some of my favorite quotes:

鈥淒o I love you? My God, if your love were a grain of sand, mine would be a universe of beaches.鈥�

鈥淚 love you,' Buttercup said. 'I know this must come as something of a surprise to you, since all I've ever done is scorn you and degrade you and taunt you, but I have loved you for several hours now, and every second, more. I thought an hour ago that I loved you more than any woman has ever loved a man, but a half hour after that I knew that what I felt before was nothing compared to what I felt then. But ten minutes after that, I understood that my previous love was a puddle compared to the high seas before a storm.鈥�

鈥淲ho says life is fair, where is that written?鈥�

鈥淚 am your Prince and you will marry me," Humperdinck said.
Buttercup whispered, "I am your servant and I refuse."
"I am you Prince and you cannot refuse."
"I am your loyal servant and I just did."
"Refusal means death."
"Kill me then.鈥�

鈥淵ou seem a decent fellow," Inigo said. "I hate to kill you."
You seem a decent fellow," answered the man in black. "I hate to die.鈥�

鈥淭his is my favorite book in all the world, though I have never read it. 鈥�
Profile Image for Stephen.
1,516 reviews12.1k followers
April 5, 2011
5.0 stars. HOW AMAZINGLY GOOD IS THIS BOOK YOU ASK?....so good it is almost


This is a literary treasure and one that I can not recommend more highly. Let me start by saying that prior to reading this book I had probably seen the movie version a dozen times or so and ABSOLUTELY LOVE IT!! I only mention this so that you know where I'm coming from in case you are not a fan of the movie as I think if you like one you will like the other and, conversely, if you didn鈥檛 like the movie, the book may not appeal to you as much.

As for the book, I was AMAZED at what a superb adaptation of the novel the movie was. Along with the Lord of the Rings trilogy and No Country for Old Men, this may be the best adaptation of a classic novel that I have ever come across. This may lead you to ask whether it is even worth it to read the book given that much of what is in the book is on the screen. My answer to that would be a resounding YES!!

First of all, the book is as much fun as the movie and the tone of the writing is unique, playful and very funny. Despite knowing the plot of the book intimately, I found the reading experience to be fresh and new.

I am going to assume that people reading this have seen the movie, read the book or at least have an understanding of the basic plot. If not, the book description and other reviews do a very good job of explaining it. Instead, I thought it might be helpful to mention those parts of the book that were not included in the movie or that I thought the book鈥檚 treatment was superior (i.e. Book is Better) and those aspects of the movie that I thought were superior to the source material (i.e. Movie is Better).

BOOK IS BETTER:

1. Prince Humperdinck鈥檚 Zoo of Death (not mentioned in the movie and I thought it was interesting and gave great insight into the character).

2. The Book does a much better job than the movie in describing Prince Humperdinck as a truly evil person and thus a top notch villain.

3. The book contains a whole Chapter on Inigo Montoya that provides details of his childhood and his Father鈥檚 original encounter with the Six Fingered Man (this is dealt with in a very brief conversation in the movie). I really enjoyed the expanded version.

4. The book also contains a whole chapter on Fezzik and shows his childhood and early years. This was excellent and I really liked learning about his trouble in adapting to deal with his enormous size.

5. The beginning of the book describes how Buttercup becomes the 鈥渕ost beautiful woman in the world鈥� and the fate of the women in front of her. This is absolutely HYSTERICAL. I wish they would have found a way to incorporate this into the movie because it was very enjoyable.

6. All of the interruptions in the Narrative where the author is explaining why he cut out whole sections of the original Morgenstern novel (the fictional novel of which this novel was supposedly the abridged 鈥済ood parts鈥�) were very funny and made the book a unique experience.

MOVIE IS BETTER:

1. I must begin with Miracle Max. The book is really good, but Billy Crystal was absolutely AMAZING (as was Carol Kane who played Miracle Max's wife). Crystal鈥檚 dialogue in the movie was better than the book and is a great example of making the original even better without messing with the feel of the story.

2. Wallace Shawn as Vizzini (pictured above) gives a truly great comic performance and made the Movie version of the character even more fun then the book version. All I kept hearing in my head whenever he was on stage in the book was him shouting INCONCEIVABLE!!

3. Similarly, Mandy Patinkin as Inigo Montoya is another example of amazing casting that made the on screen version of the character even more fun than the book version.

4. The final scene between Westley and Prince Humperdinck was more fun in the movie than in the book.

Bottom-line, if you have enjoyed the movie but have not read the book, I strongly recommend it. Similarly, if you have read the book and have not seen the movie, I strongly recommend that as well. Both are terrific.
Profile Image for Melissa 鈾� Dog/Wolf Lover 鈾� Martin.
3,621 reviews11.4k followers
March 10, 2018
Okay, I like the movie better than the book. I mean I love watching all of my characters! So There!

Anyhoo, I'm adding some pictures from the book. There are a lot of them but I'm just going to add a few. I thought they were wonderful. On the inside front and back pages there is a map but I only added one part of the map so you can get the idea =)













Happy Reading!

Mel 鈾�

MY BLOG:
Profile Image for Miranda Reads.
1,589 reviews165k followers
April 27, 2021
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鈥淲e鈥檒l never survive!鈥�
鈥淣onsense. You鈥檙e only saying that because no one ever has.鈥�
Buttercup spent her entire life on a farm with her mom, dad and the farm boy who lived outside in the hovel.

But then, one day, all that changed.

She became beautiful.
Life isn't fair, it's just fairer than death, that's all.
And soon she learns that with great beauty comes great tragedy.

For soon after she learns that the Farm By (now known as Westley) loves her, he sails off to make a fortune and is seemingly lost forever.

Meanwhile Prince Humperdinck learns that the most beautiful woman in all the land is of marrying age and demands her to become his wife and she agrees, deciding early that she will kill herself when the time comes (which is actually quite convenient, considering Humperdinck was planning on killing her too)

But then, Buttercup is kidnapped by a quirky trio of characters (A Sicilian, a giant and a master swordsman), is then pursued by a mysterious masked man, must fight her way through man-eating eels, giant swamp rats and so much more.

The rest, as they say, is history.
鈥淎s you wish...鈥�
As always, I am ABSOLUTELY in love with this book.

This time I read the 30th edition - where I learned of the story of the author's first encounter with S. Morgenstern's classic tale.

Just a quick note - skip the introduction. It goes on and on and on and honestly really put a damper on my enjoyment of this book. Very frustrating that it ended up being .
鈥泪苍肠辞苍肠别颈惫补产濒别!"
"You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.鈥�
Essentially, it's suffice to know that the Princess Bride is based on a longer story that Goldman edited down into a more manageable book.

I do absolutely LOVE the satire and the characters in this book. The plot is ever the exciting whirlwind and every time I finish reading it, I just want to go back in again.

The 30th edition is beautifully illustrated and really gives the book that extra lift.

Highly, highly recommended!
鈥淢y name is Inigo Montoya, you killed my father, prepare to die!鈥�


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Profile Image for Tadiana 鉁㎞ight Owl鈽�.
1,880 reviews23.2k followers
June 9, 2020
One of my all-time favorites! Long before the movie existed, I stumbled across this book in my college bookstore. This cover spoke to my YA fairy-tale-loving heart:

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So I bought it, without knowing a thing about the story. And the book was NOT what I was expecting.

It was way, WAY better.

If you love the movie, read the book ... and don't let yourself get bogged down in the long, offbeat intro. (Skim it if you need to.) You'll get a lot of background history on the various characters, which can be extremely funny, and a little poignant. The movie is in large part very true to the book, but William Goldman has a dry, satirical sense of humor that doesn't entirely come through in the movie. (The part about the Greatest Kisses Ever cracks me up every time.)

But it's still about "Beasts of all natures and descriptions. Pain. Death. Brave men. Coward men. Strongest men. Chases. Escapes. Lies. Truths. Passions."

And it's wonderful.
Profile Image for Ahmad Sharabiani.
9,563 reviews753 followers
December 24, 2021
The Princess Bride, William Goldman

The Princess Bride is a 1987 American romantic comedy fantasy adventure film directed and co-produced by Rob Reiner, starring Cary Elwes, Robin Wright, Mandy Patinkin, Chris Sarandon, Wallace Shawn, Andr茅 the Giant and Christopher Guest.

Adapted by William Goldman from his 1973 novel of the same name, it tells the story of a farmhand named Westley, accompanied by companions befriended along the way, who must rescue his true love Princess Buttercup from the odious Prince Humperdinck.

The film effectively preserves the novel's narrative style by presenting the story as a book being read by a grandfather (Peter Falk) to his sick grandson (Fred Savage).

毓賳賵丕賳賴丕蹖 趩丕倬 卮丿賴 丿乇 丕蹖乇丕賳: 芦卮丕賴夭丕丿賴 禺丕賳賲 鬲丕夭賴 毓乇賵爻禄貨 芦毓乇賵爻蹖 卮丕賴丿禺鬲禄貨 賳賵蹖爻賳丿賴: 賵蹖賱蹖丕賲 诏賵賱丿賲賳貨 鬲丕乇蹖禺 賳禺爻鬲蹖賳 亘蹖賳卮 賮蹖賱賲 爻丕賱賴丕 倬蹖卮 賵 爻倬爻 禺賵丕賳卮 讴鬲丕亘 乇賵夭 蹖丕夭丿賴賲 賲丕賴 丌賵乇蹖賱 爻丕賱2017賲蹖賱丕丿蹖

毓賳賵丕賳 讴鬲丕亘: 卮丕賴夭丕丿賴 禺丕賳賲 鬲丕夭賴 毓乇賵爻貨 賳賵蹖爻賳丿賴: 賵蹖賱蹖丕賲 诏賵賱丿賲賳貨 賲鬲乇噩賲: 賱蹖賱丕 胤丕賴乇蹖貨 鬲賴乇丕賳貙 賮乇賴賳诏 賳卮乇 賳賵貙 爻丕賱1395貨 丿乇391氐貨 卮丕亘讴9786008547020貨 賲賵囟賵毓 丿丕爻鬲丕賳賴丕蹖 賳賵蹖爻賳丿诏丕賳 丕蹖丕賱丕鬲 賲鬲丨丿賴 丌賲乇蹖讴丕 - 爻丿賴 20賲

毓賳賵丕賳: 毓乇賵爻蹖 卮丕賴丿禺鬲: 丿丕爻鬲丕賳 讴賱丕爻蹖讴 蹖讴 毓卮賯 賵丕賯毓蹖 賵 賲丕噩乇丕噩賵蹖蹖鈥屬囏й� 噩匕丕亘 亘賴 賯賱賲 丕氐賱蹖 丕爻 賲賵乇诏賳爻鬲乇賳 賳爻禺賴 賯爻賲鬲鈥屬囏й� 禺賵亘貨 鬲賱禺蹖氐 丕夭 賵蹖賱蹖丕賲 诏賵賱丿賲賳貨 鬲乇噩賲賴 賱賷賱丕 胤丕賴乇蹖貨 賵蹖乇丕爻鬲丕乇 丕賲蹖乇丨爻蹖賳 賲賴丿蹖鈥屫藏ж囏� 鬲賴乇丕賳: 賳卮乇 賴賲丕賳貙 爻丕賱鈥忊€�1398貨 丿乇464氐貨 卮丕亘讴9786009822720貨

毓賳賵丕賳 賮蹖賱賲: 毓乇賵爻 卮丕賴夭丕丿賴貨 讴丕乇诏乇丿丕賳: 乇丕亘 蹖賳乇貨 鬲賴蹖賴鈥� 讴賳賳丿賴: 丕賳丿乇賵 卮蹖賳賲賳貨 賮蹖賱賲鈥屬嗀з呝団€� 賳賵蹖爻: 賵蹖賱蹖丕賲 诏賵賱丿賲賳貨 亘乇 倬丕蹖賴: 毓乇賵爻 卮丕賴夭丕丿賴貨 丕孬乇: 賵蹖賱蹖丕賲 诏賵賱丿賲賳貨 亘丕夭蹖诏乇丕賳: 讴乇蹖 丕賱賵蹖爻貨 乇丕亘蹖賳 乇丕蹖鬲貨 賲賳丿蹖 倬鬲蹖賳讴蹖賳貨 丌賳丿乇蹖 噩蹖丕賳鬲貨 讴乇蹖爻 爻丕乇丕賳丿賵賳貨 讴乇蹖爻鬲賵賮乇 诏爻鬲貨 賵丕賱丕爻 卮丕賵賳貨 賮乇丿 爻賵蹖噩貨 倬蹖鬲乇 賮丕賱讴貨 亘蹖賱蹖 讴乇蹖爻鬲丕賱貨 讴丕乇賵賱 讴蹖賳貨 賲賱 丕爻賲蹖鬲貨 丌賳 丿丕蹖爻賳貨 倬蹖鬲乇 讴賵讴貨 乇丕賵蹖: 倬蹖鬲乇 賮丕賱讴貨 賲賵爻蹖賯蹖: 賲丕乇讴 賳丕賮賱乇貨 賮蹖賱賲鈥� 亘乇丿丕乇蹖: 丕蹖丿乇蹖賳 亘蹖丿賱貨 鬲丿賵蹖賳: 乇丕亘乇鬲 賱蹖鬲丕賳貨 卮乇讴鬲 鬲賵賱蹖丿貨 丌.爻蹖.鬲蹖 鬲乇蹖 讴丕賲蹖賳蹖讴蹖卮賳貨 鬲賵夭蹖毓鈥� 讴賳賳丿賴: 賮丕讴爻 爻丿賴 亘蹖爻鬲賲貨 賵 ...貨

讴鬲丕亘 芦毓乇賵爻蹖 卮丕賴丿禺鬲禄 丕孬乇蹖 丕夭 芦賵蹖賱蹖丕賲 诏賵賱丿賲賳禄 亘丕 鬲乇噩賲賴 禺丕賳賲 芦賱蹖賱丕 胤丕賴乇蹖禄 賵 趩丕倬 丕賳鬲卮丕乇丕鬲 芦賴賲丿丕賳禄 丕爻鬲貨 丕蹖賳 讴鬲丕亘 乇賵丕蹖鬲诏乇 丿丕爻鬲丕賳蹖 丨賲丕爻蹖貙 毓丕卮賯丕賳賴 賵 倬乇 賲丕噩乇丕貙 亘賴 賯賱賲 賳賵蹖爻賳丿賴 蹖 芦丌賲乇蹖讴丕蹖蹖禄 丕爻鬲貙 讴賴 賮蹖賱賲蹖 亘丕 丕賯鬲亘丕爻 丕夭 丌賳 爻丕禺鬲賴 卮丿賴 丕爻鬲貨 丿丕爻鬲丕賳蹖 卮亘蹖賴 亘賴 賯氐賴 賴丕蹖 倬乇蹖丕賳 亘丕 卮禺氐蹖鬲 賴丕蹖 诏賵賳丕诏賵賳貙 丕夭 卮丕賴夭丕丿賴 诏乇賮鬲賴 鬲丕 睾賵賱 賵 丿夭丿丕賳 丿乇蹖丕蹖蹖貨 芦亘丕鬲乇讴丕倬禄 卮禺氐蹖鬲 丕氐賱蹖 讴鬲丕亘 丕爻鬲貙 丿禺鬲乇蹖 亘爻蹖丕乇 夭蹖亘丕貙 讴賴 鬲賵噩賴 賲乇丿丕賳 賮乇丕賵丕賳蹖 乇丕 亘賴 禺賵蹖卮 噩賱亘 讴乇丿賴貙 丕賵 丿乇爻鬲 丌賳诏丕賴 讴賴 倬蹖 賲蹖亘乇丿貙 毓丕卮賯 禺丿賲鬲讴丕乇 禺丕賳賵丕丿賴 卮丿賴貙 賲噩亘賵乇 賲蹖卮賵丿貙 丿賵乇蹖 丕卮 乇丕 倬匕蹖乇丕 诏乇丿丿貙 賵 丿乇 賴賲蹖賳 賴噩乇丕賳 丕爻鬲貙 讴賴 丿夭丿蹖丿賴 賲蹖卮賵丿貙 賳噩丕鬲 賲蹖蹖丕亘丿貙 賵 亘賴 乇睾賲 毓賱丕賯賴 蹖 倬蹖卮蹖賳 禺賵蹖卮貙 賴賲爻乇 卮丕賴夭丕丿賴 芦賴丕賲倬乇丿蹖賳讴禄 賲蹖诏乇丿丿貨 丕蹖賳亘丕乇 賴賲 亘丕 蹖丕乇蹖 诏乇賵賴蹖 讴賴 倬蹖卮 丕夭 丕蹖賳 賳噩丕鬲卮 丿丕丿賴 亘賵丿賳丿貙 丕夭 丿爻鬲 卮丕賴夭丕丿賴 乇賴丕貙 賵 亘丕 噩賳丕蹖鬲讴丕乇丕賳 賵 丕賳爻丕賳賴丕蹖蹖 倬賱蹖丿貙 丌卮賳丕 賲蹖卮賵丿貙 賵 丿乇 賴賲蹖賳 诏蹖乇 賵 丿丕乇貙 賵 倬卮鬲 爻乇 诏匕丕卮鬲賳 乇賵蹖丿丕丿賴丕蹖 诏賵賳丕诏賵賳貙 亘丕乇 丿蹖诏乇 芦賵爻鬲賱蹖禄 乇丕 丿蹖丿丕乇 賲蹖讴賳丿貨 毓卮賯 乇丕爻鬲蹖賳 賵 賳禺爻鬲蹖賳 禺賵蹖卮貙 讴賴 丕讴賳賵賳 丿賵爻鬲 氐賲蹖賲蹖 丿夭丿丕賳 丿乇蹖丕蹖蹖 丕爻鬲

诏夭蹖丿賴 丕蹖 丕夭 讴鬲丕亘: (芦賵爻鬲賱蹖禄貙 賲乇丕 丿賵爻鬲 丿丕乇蹖責 賲賵囟賵毓 賴賲蹖賳 丕爻鬲責貨 芦賵爻鬲賱蹖禄 賳賲蹖鬲賵丕賳爻鬲 亘丕賵乇 讴賳丿貨 芦丿賵爻鬲鬲 丿丕乇賲責 禺丿丕蹖 賲賳貙 丕诏乇 毓卮賯 鬲賵 蹖讴 丿丕賳賴 卮賳 亘丕卮丿貙 毓卮賯 賲賳 蹖讴 丿賳蹖丕 爻丕丨賱 丕爻鬲貨 丕诏乇 毓卮賯 鬲賵鈥β回� 芦亘丕鬲乇讴丕倬禄 丨乇賮卮 乇丕 賯胤毓 讴乇丿貨 芦賲賳 賴賳賵夭 丕賵賱蹖 乇丕 賳賮賴賲蹖丿賲.禄 丿丕卮鬲 禺蹖賱蹖 賴蹖噩丕賳 夭丿賴 賲蹖卮丿貨 芦亘诏匕丕乇 丕賵賱 丕蹖賳 乇丕 乇賵卮賳 讴賳蹖賲貨 鬲賵 賲蹖诏賵蹖蹖 丕诏乇 毓卮賯 賲賳 亘賴 丕賳丿丕夭賴 蹖讴 丿丕賳賴 卮賳 丕爻鬲貙 毓卮賯 鬲賵 丕蹖賳蹖 丕爻鬲 讴賴 賲蹖诏賵蹖蹖責 鬲氐賵蹖乇賴丕 賲乇丕 诏蹖噩 賲蹖讴賳賳丿貙 蹖毓賳蹖 蹖讴 丿賳蹖丕 爻丕丨賱 鬲賵 丕夭 卮賳 賲賳 亘夭乇诏鬲乇 丕爻鬲責 蹖丕乇蹖賲 讴賳貙 賵爻鬲賱蹖貨 丨爻 賲蹖讴賳賲 丿乇 丌爻鬲丕賳賴 趩蹖夭 亘蹖 丕賳丿丕夭賴 賲賴賲蹖 丕賲.禄貨 芦亘賴 禺丕胤乇 鬲賵 賴賲賴 蹖 丕蹖賳 爻丕賱賴丕 鬲賵 讴賱亘賴 丕賲 賲丕賳丿賲貨 亘賴 禺丕胤乇 鬲賵 禺賵丿賲 夭亘丕賳賴丕蹖 賲禺鬲賱賮 蹖丕丿 诏乇賮鬲賲貨 亘丿賳賲 乇丕 賯賵蹖 讴乇丿賲 趩賵賳 賮讴乇 讴乇丿賲 賲賲讴賳 丕爻鬲 丕夭 亘丿賳 賯賵蹖 禺賵卮鬲 亘蹖丕蹖丿貨 蹖讴 毓賲乇 亘丕 丕蹖賳 丌乇夭賵 夭賳丿诏蹖 讴乇丿賲 讴賴 丕诏乇 亘乇丕蹖 蹖讴 賱丨馗賴 讴賵鬲丕賴 賴賲 卮丿賴貙 賳诏丕賴賲 讴賳蹖貨 丿乇 賴賲賴 蹖 丕蹖賳 爻丕賱賴丕 賱丨馗賴 丕蹖 賳亘賵丿賴 讴賴 丿蹖丿賳鬲 亘丕毓孬 賳卮賵丿 賯賱亘賲 禺賵丿卮 乇丕 丿蹖賵丕賳賴 賵丕乇 亘賴 賯賮爻賴 爻蹖賳賴 丕賲 亘讴賵亘丿貨 卮亘蹖 乇丕 蹖丕丿賲 賳賲蹖丌蹖丿 讴賴 趩賴乇賴 丕鬲 賲乇丕 鬲丕 禺賵丕亘 賴賲乇丕賴蹖 賳讴乇丿賴 亘丕卮丿貨 氐亘丨蹖 賵噩賵丿 賳丿丕卮鬲賴 讴賴 趩卮賲賴丕蹖賲 乇丕 亘丕 禺蹖丕賱 鬲賵 亘丕夭 賳讴賳賲鈥ω� 賴蹖趩 讴丿丕賲 丕夭 丕蹖賳賴丕 乇丕 丿乇讴 賲蹖讴賳蹖貙 亘丕鬲乇讴丕倬 蹖丕 賲蹖禺賵丕賴蹖 亘丕夭 賴賲 丕丿丕賲賴 亘丿賴賲責禄)貨 倬丕蹖丕賳 賳賯賱

鬲丕乇蹖禺 亘賴賳诏丕賲 乇爻丕賳蹖 27/02/1400賴噩乇蹖 禺賵乇卮蹖丿蹖貨 02/10/1400賴噩乇蹖 禺賵乇卮蹖丿蹖貨 丕. 卮乇亘蹖丕賳蹖
Profile Image for shifu.
117 reviews866 followers
February 9, 2025
If you are a person who grew up in the US or UK or in any part of the world or I dunno a spaceship, you would probably know what someone means when they say 鈥淚nconceivable!鈥� but for me, a person who grew in Pakistan where the most popular thing was Justin Bieber singing 鈥淏aby鈥� while the children tried to copy whatever the heck that dude was saying, life was not so generous. I didn鈥檛 know what Harry Potter was. He was a jadoogar ki aulad (son of a magician) as my mother likes to say.

A few months ago I was looking at a list of the best 鈥渂ook to film鈥� adaptations and this baby was on the top. I immediately googled it and I thought what the heck? This gets the top spot. Of course then I watched the film and then I bought the book and then I read it and the rest is history.

This has been said so many times and I will sound like a broken record but that film is amazing. In the case of this particular book, both mediums of telling this story are delightful, and I love them both. First off, that film is fantastic. The casting, the direction 鈥� it鈥檚 pure perfection. Yes the effects are cheesy but that was 1987 so *shrugs*. Yes, the film does exclude some points and there some itty bitty changes but HAVE YOU SEEN THAT FILM? Plus it gets bonus points for *ahem ahem* Cary Elwes. I don鈥檛 even need to explain myself.



Now onto the review. You know some people might tell you that the plot of this book is nothing special. But i would strongly disagree with them. Why? Well because for me Goldman took the itty bitty pieces that everyone uses and he created something new from it. I mean isn't this a stereotype? Poor boy. Pretty girl. But Goldman has included so much more elements into this tale.
First off, that beginning line is everything.
鈥淭his is my favorite book in all the world, though I have never read it.鈥�

Next off, the concept is so novel. You rarely come across something like this. It's fast paced and most importantly, it can tick every box you can think of. As the author says, this book has:
鈥淔encing. Fighting. Torture. Poison. True love. Hate. Revenge. Giants. Hunters. Bad men. Good men. Beautifulest ladies. Snakes. Spiders. Beasts of all natures and descriptions. Pain. Death. Brave men. Coward men. Strongest men. Chases. Escapes. Lies. Truths. Passion. Miracles.鈥�

He used the word "beautifulest" and i think that's the best thing i've ever read 馃槶

Secondly, i am a horribly sarcastic person in real life. So for me (one of) the strength of this book lies in the narration from Goldman himself. The way he pokes fun, his satire, his commentary ... throughout the book it's hilarious. And for me this outside narration feels like an entirely different story in itself.

And then we have the characters. The characters in "The Princess Bride" are so good from all angles. No matter what kinds of characters you prefer reading about, there鈥檚 bound to be one that you end up rooting for.

A gem. A true gem. A masterpiece. Please dear person read this.

Plus, I took the job out of Nina's hands for the time being and decided to explain Hogwarts Houses with Princess Bride quotes:

Gryffindor:



Hufflepuff:



Ravenclaw:



Slytherin:



Thank you for attending the Sorting Ceremony. Nina take your job back
Profile Image for Adina (notifications back, log out, clear cache) .
1,220 reviews4,990 followers
March 5, 2025
Another title that everybody loves except me. I feel like everybody was influenced in their rating by the movie they saw in childhood, which is completely unknown for me.

It is a fast paced read with some interesting action and some humor that did not feel that funny at times. I really liked two of the characters, Inigo and Fezzi, but I could not stand the main ones, Buttercup and Westley.

The interruptions of the author were annoying and it gave me the impression of a bitter and insufferable person.
Profile Image for Blaine.
947 reviews1,050 followers
December 21, 2021
I smiled at him. How could he not like it? Passion. Duels. Miracles. Giants. True love.
I am assuming you have seen this movie. If you somehow haven鈥檛 yet, stop reading this review right now, go watch the movie (I鈥檒l lend you my copy) and then come back. Seriously. I鈥檒l wait.

The list of books that are not as good as the movie is really short. I can think of eleven (I keep a running list on my profile page). , and are flawed books that were turned into good movies. , , , and are solid books that were turned into great movies. And four鈥�, , , and this book, The Princess Bride鈥攁re great books that were turned into all-time masterpiece-level movies.

Mr. Goldman wrote the screenplay as well as the novel. In the movie, he used the framing device of the grandfather reading the story to his sick grandson. For a fairy tale, I think it鈥檚 better than the device in the book, which is more meta. William Goldman is a character in the novel, at first explaining how it came to be that he had published a 鈥済ood parts鈥� abridgment of the (completely fictitious) Florinese classic book by S. Morgenstern. He then appears in fourth-wall-breaking notes that pop up throughout the remainder of the book, making comments and explaining sections that he had edited out.

But the core of the novel The Princess Bride鈥攖he fairy tale鈥攊s almost exactly as it is in the movie, and it鈥檚 wonderful. Westley and Buttercup. Fezzik, Inigo, and Vezzini. Humperdinck and Count Rugen. 鈥淎s you wish.鈥� 鈥淚nconceivable.鈥� 鈥淚鈥檓 not left-handed.鈥� 鈥淗ello, my name is Inigo Montoya, you killed my father, prepare to die.鈥� William Goldman was a brilliant writer. He wrote a great, inventive, sarcastic fairy tale novel. He then took the 鈥済ood parts鈥� of the novel and wrote a absolutely classic movie. A must-read.
Profile Image for Matt.
1,019 reviews30.2k followers
June 11, 2023
鈥溾€楲ook: we can鈥檛 go back and we certainly don鈥檛 want to stay here, so we must keep on going as we were before these little things happened. Down. Down is our direction, Fezzik, but I can tell you鈥檙e a bit edgy about all this, so, out of the goodness of my heart, I will let you walk down not behind me, and not in front of me, but right next to me, on the same step, stride for stride, and you put an arm around my shoulder because this will probably make you feel better, and I, so as not to make you feel foolish, will put an arm around your shoulder, and thus, safe, protected, together, we will descend.鈥�

鈥榃ill you draw your sword with your free hand?鈥� [Fezzik asked].

鈥業 already have. Will you make a fist with yours?鈥�

鈥業t鈥檚 clenched.鈥�

鈥楾hen let's look on the bright side: we're having an adventure, Fezzik, and most people live and die without being as lucky as we are.鈥欌€�

- William Goldman, The Princess Bride: S. Morgenstern鈥檚 Classic Tale of True Love and High Adventure

The first time I sat down to watch to Rob Reiner鈥檚 1987 film classic The Princess Bride, it was introduced to me with the sort of hushed awe usually reserved for biblical prophets receiving stone tablets. You have to watch this, I was told. You have to.

The experience was, in a word, mesmerizing.

I was far too young to catch all the sly nuances in a movie that both precisely deconstructs and joyously celebrates the fantasy-adventure genre, but I loved it nonetheless. The broadness of the comedy. The snappiness of its action scenes. The climbing-race up the Cliffs of Insanity. The 鈥淚 am not lefthanded鈥� swordfight. The fire swamp, the rodents of unusual size, 鈥淚 am Inigo Montoya,鈥� and freaking Andre the Giant. All of it landed perfectly.

Watch it only once? Inconceivable!

I鈥檝e seen the movie dozens and dozens of times over the years. In the basement of friends; on my couch in the morning; in college dorm rooms; in the theater; drunk and hungover and sober; on my couch in the afternoon; with my kids; with extended family; on holidays; and on my couch late at night. It is endlessly rewatchable, and whenever I catch it, I usually sit down until it gets to one of my five or six or seven favorite scenes.

For all the glee I鈥檝e taken in Cary Elwes鈥� smirk, and Christopher Guest鈥檚 six-fingered man, and Billy Crystal鈥檚 zany miracle worker, it probably took me ten or fifteen years to realize that the film was based on William Goldman鈥檚 1973 novel of the same name. It had never occurred to me that something so purely cinematic started off on the page.

As a completist, I had to read it. But once I got it, I delayed, and let it linger on the shelf. The film, after all, is nearly perfect, at least in the sense that I couldn鈥檛 imagine changing a single scene. What, exactly, could the book add to my experience?

Honestly, not that much. The Princess Bride is a good book by a great writer, and it has its share of mic-drop lines. But at the end of the day, I mostly read it for comparison鈥檚 sake.

***

Like the movie, the novel has its tongue firmly planted in-cheek. The conceit of The Princess Bride is that it is actually an abridgement of a much-longer book by the impeccably-named S. Morgenstern. Goldman 鈥� playing the role of 鈥淕oldman鈥� 鈥� writes the introduction, and also provides a running commentary throughout. He plays this joke right to the end, and my 25th anniversary edition has an epilogue that acts as an excerpt to a sequel that 鈥� unfortunately 鈥� never got written.

***

Given its ubiquity, it seems a waste of space to set out the plot. But wasting space is what I do.

In short, it is the tale of Westley, the farm boy who loves Buttercup; and of Inigo, the Spanish sword master sworn to wreak vengeance on the evil Count Rugen; and of Vizzini, the clever Sicilian plotting war; and of Fezzik, the gentle, slow-witted giant. All of them are thrown together by fate, as Westley tries to keep his beloved from marrying the evil Prince Humperdinck.

The best description 鈥� unsurprisingly 鈥� comes from Goldman himself:

Fencing. Fighting. Torture. Poison. True love. Hate. Revenge. Giants. Hunters. Bad men. Good men. Beautifulest ladies. Snakes. Spiders. Beasts of all natures and descriptions. Pain. Death. Brave men. Coward men. Strongest men. Chases. Escapes. Lies. Truths. Passions. Miracles.


If this doesn鈥檛 sell you on it, what more can I say?

***

Goldman, who died in 2018, had one heck of a career, especially in the realm of screenplays. Both Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and All the President鈥檚 Men are widely recognized for the skill of the wordsmithing, with lines so well-crafted they鈥檝e become part of the culture at large. Even his lesser-tier films, such as the Stephen King adaptation Hearts in Atlantis, contain lines that belong inimitably to him.

In The Princess Bride, Goldman does a nifty balancing act, shifting between the broad and the narrowly-focused, from silly humor to deep emotion.

All the famous movie scenes are here, such as the 鈥淏attle of Wits,鈥� where the world learned one of life鈥檚 important lessons: 鈥淣ever go in against a Sicilian when death is on the line.鈥� But there are also scenes excised from the film, such as the strangely heartfelt sequence where Inigo and Fezzik venture into the Zoo of Death.

***

Having marinated in the film for so long, reading the book-version of The Princess Bride felt a bit academic. I did not read with any sense of wonder at what might come; I knew exactly 鈥� for the most part 鈥� what lay ahead. Instead, I read it mostly to see what got left out, what got changed, and how well Goldman made the transition from words to moving pictures.

One of the great nothing-arguments of our time on earth is the debate over which is better: the book or the movie. It鈥檚 a wholly subjective query that is treated in an entirely objective manner, as though it鈥檚 a mathematical equation with a single right answer. People get really heated about it.

Generally speaking, I鈥檓 more of a book guy, because I like the expansiveness and depth of a novel as opposed to the streamlining of a commercial film. But there are some major exceptions, usually when a so-so piece of fiction gets picked up by a really talented filmmaker. The best example I can think of is Jaws, which is an all-time movie sharply excised from a plodding, weirdly-paced aquatic potboiler, which has one of the cringiest sex scenes I鈥檝e ever had the dubious honor of reading.

In the case of The Princess Bride, the movie is clearly superior to me, if only because I fell in love with it first. It is impossible, at this point, to absorb Goldman鈥檚 lines without hearing them read aloud by Mandy Patinkin or Wallace Shawn.

The book ain鈥檛 half bad; it just so happens that the movie is twice as good as just about anything else you can watch.
Profile Image for Kelly (and the Book Boar).
2,761 reviews9,311 followers
February 28, 2019
Find all of my reviews at:

EVERY STAR THERE IS TO STAR!!!!!!



Yeah, a little bit. It鈥檚 also the best book in the history of ever.

Sure it has a little kissing



but it also has pirates



and bad guys



and swordsmen



and giants



and R.O.U.S.es



I鈥檓 not writing a synopsis. I鈥檓 not writing a review. I鈥檓 just telling you if you have not already read it, read it now.

You ask: 鈥淲hat if I don鈥檛 like it????鈥� INCONCEIVABLE!



If you read it, hate it, and have the desire to 1 Star it or say bad things, you should probably unfriend me first. I might be inclined to light your ass up. Just kidding. Maybe.

鈥淐ome my love, I'll tell you a tale
Of a boy and girl and their love story
And how he loved her oh so much
And all the charms she did possess

Now this did happen once upon a time
When things were not so complex
And how he worshipped the ground she walked
And when he looked in her eyes he became obsessed

This love was stronger than the powers so dark
A prince could have within his kingdom
His spells to weak and steal a heart
Within her breast but only sleeping

He said "Don't you know I love you oh so much
And lay my heart at the foot of your dress?"
She said "Don't you know that storybook love's
Always have a happy ending?"

Then he swooped her up just like in the books
And on his stallion they rode away
My love is like a storybook story
But it's as real as the feelings I feel
My love is like a storybook story
But it's as real as the feelings I feel"

漏Mark Knopfler
Profile Image for Elle (ellexamines on TT & Substack).
1,144 reviews19.1k followers
March 23, 2020
I hate saying this but the movie is legitimately better. This book at times felt like an odd first draft of my favorite movie to me鈥攓uotes that I loved in the movie are somehow delivered in a manner that is rather oddly unfunny. I think this might be a case of the movie ruining it a bit for me... but also, I doubt I would've ever loved the movie as much if I had read this first.

I read this from someone who鈥檚 read the book before: do not read the 20th-anniversary introduction. As someone who read it unwittingly I can confirm it鈥檚 fifty pages long and not good. Also, and I wish I had something better to say about this--the framing device is so obsessed with the fact that his son is fat and it gets really distasteful. It鈥檚 not even funny in the first place. I feel the same way about the Buttercup's Baby outro, which just felt like it ruined my childhood a bit (it kills off a character? I think temporarily? But it still kills off a character? It's also just still not funny?)

I genuinely think without the intro and outro making me feel like I wanted to kill William Goldman I probably would've liked this a lot more. As it was, they just made me feel a weird sort of animosity towards the author, not for ruining his book but for thinking he's funny enough for me to read a 50-page backstory about him finding this book and reading to his son (who is fat, I don't know if you heard. did you know that?).

Here are some things I did enjoy about this book:
鈫扵he timeless feeling to the story
鈫扵he feeling of the story within a story, the edited version of an obsessed-with-beauty fairy tale, is fun
鈫扞nigo Montoya you killed my father prepare to die is still iconic
鈫扚ezzik鈥檚 backstory!! I liked that a lot!!
鈫扺estley is way more useless at the beginning of this book and I thought that was funny
鈫扝umperdink is a little different from the movie but equally amusing
鈫払uttercup has some character development! Not a lot but some fun stuff!
鈫�I love you so much more now than twenty minutes ago that there cannot be comparison. I love you so much more now than when you opened your hovel door, there cannot be comparison. There is no room in my body for anything but you. My arms love you, my ears adore you, my knees shake with blind affection. My mind begs you to ask it something so it can obey.

I have mixed feelings on this and I really wish I hadn't read the intro now.

| | | | | |
Profile Image for Mischenko.
1,023 reviews95 followers
August 19, 2023
Summary: The book opens with author William Goldman explaining how his father would read to him as a young child. One story he would read was titled The Princess Bride by S. Morgenstern, a man from Florin. Goldman loved the story so much as a child, so he decides to give a copy to his ten-year-old son on his tenth birthday. Jason, his son, can鈥檛 seem to get into the story at all, and Goldman soon realizes that this isn鈥檛 the same story his father told him. This book has incredibly uninteresting parts that Goldman doesn鈥檛 recall. So, he begins to retell the story by creating a whole new book with only the good stuff.

Now we begin to read The Princess Bride鈥� a story about a girl named Buttercup, one of the most beautiful women in the world. Buttercup loves demanding the farm boy, Westley, to complete tasks. At one point, she realizes she might even love him. Soon the two admit their love for each other, and Westley sets off to seek his fortune so they can begin their life. Buttercup鈥檚 heart drops not long after when she hears that Westley was killed by the Dread Pirate Roberts鈥揳 pirate who murders all. Buttercup vows that she will never love again, but she agrees to marry a prince for convenience. Was this a wise choice to make? Is Westley dead after all? There鈥檚 no telling what adventure awaits for Buttercup and the other characters in this story.

Story: I鈥檝e always loved fairy tales, and this story is a good one. The Princess Bride wasn鈥檛 as fairytale-like this time around like it was the first time I read it as a younger reader. It鈥檚 very similar to the movie but much more descriptive. It鈥檚 exciting, comical at times, and full of action. This time around, I wasn鈥檛 feeling the 鈥榯rue love鈥� between Buttercup and Westley, and I also forgot how adventurous and comical it is. The film seems to do a much better job on the love story than the book鈥揳mong other things. The cliffhanger ending had my jaw on the floor鈥攏o joke. I鈥檓 still not sure how to feel about it because there are multiple possibilities of what could鈥檝e happened, and it niggles me. It鈥檚 interesting how what you expect to happen in the story isn鈥檛 what happens at all. This is a fantasy, and you must suspend disbelief at times. But there are also constant reminders that life isn鈥檛 perfect, and things aren鈥檛 always going to be okay.

Characters: The characters are lacking. We don鈥檛 learn that much about Buttercup other than the fact that she isn鈥檛 perfect. She may be beautiful, but she has some self-consciousness and jealousy, which is very different from the brave character portrayed in the movie. Book Buttercup is different and not as likable, in my opinion; she even annoyed me at times. Westley鈥檚 a bit more aggressive in the book, and he even strikes Buttercup, which was a mere raise of the hand in the film. Maybe it was meant to be funny? Other characters were more richly drawn, including Fezzik, Inigo, and Prince Humperdinck. Fezzik turned out to be my favorite character after all, and if you want to learn more about this gentle giant, you won鈥檛 want to miss out on reading this book. The illustrations turned out to be few and far between, but it was still neat to visualize the characters.

Writing: The writing is smooth and easy to read, but the format takes some getting used to. You could technically skip the author鈥檚 commentary altogether and just read the story of Buttercup and Westley. I took the time to read the author鈥檚 thoughts when it was interesting. Some people may love the going back and forth, but the commentary鈥攁lbeit infrequent鈥攃an be distracting.

Should you read it? It鈥檚 hard to say. The Princess Bride was a reread for me, and I forgot some of the content. I had a love/hate relationship with the commentary by the author. It essentially is a fictional story about a fictional story, and the author puts his two cents in by talking about what he took out (when he wrote it) and why. Goldman shares opinions on what鈥檚 happening in the story written by S. Morgenstern (who鈥檚 fictional as well, by the way). He also shares stories about his family, although that may be fictional too. I found myself skimming over the first half of his excerpts, but then parts of the second half felt necessary, especially in the end. Even though the movie does follow the book fairly closely with plot and characters, the film has more of a fairy tale feel to it, and cannot be compared. With that said, the book has more on the characters and more depth that the movie doesn鈥檛, including detailed histories for Fezzik and Inigo and a continuation of the story into Buttercup鈥檚 and Westley鈥檚 future together. So, therefore, I say true fans of the film should probably read the book!

*Includes mention of suicide, crude language, and multiple racial slurs*

4****
Profile Image for veronica.
80 reviews2 followers
August 6, 2008
I know there are people who LOOOOOOOVE the film, "The Princess Bride." While I thoroughly enjoy the movie, I think I may only LOOVE it. I mean, Inigo Montoya is FABULOUS and I really really dug Westley, and the pwiest was vewwy vewwy funny!!!! So, when someone was kind enough to lend me the book, I had relatively high expectations. Now, don't get me wrong, I wasn't disappointed in The Princess Bride, but I just wasn't thrilled or moved to laugh till I cry (which the movie sometimes can).

First of all, let's get all English-major on this, and talk about the meta-layered frame narratives going on in this novel. Holy cow! First of all, keep in mind that the book's title is The Princess Bride, S. Morgenstern's Classic Tale of True Love and High Adventure. Basically, what Goldman does is this -- he tells his readers that the book they are holding in their hand (his book) is actually the abridgment of the original PB written by this invented author, Morgenstern. As a child, says Goldman (within the novel, not in the introduction or anything), his father read PB to him aloud, and the boy fell in love with the book. When, as a father himself, he attempted to pass on this beloved childhood novel to his very fat and very spoiled son, he is shocked to find out that the boy can't get into the book -- because it is too long and too boring! It turns out that Goldman's father, when reading to the boy, had skipped hundreds of pages of political and historical satire! So, when Goldman's own son attempted to read the book, he found it overly dry and long. This leads Goldman to undertake the task of abridging PB and basically re-publish the book as his father had read it to him -- just the adventure plot and the romance.

While bearing this in mind, you must remember that Goldman is making all of this up. There is no Morgenstern, no original PB. The project in itself is quite interesting and it had me excited at reading a book that really messed with the reader's perception of narrator, of what's real and what isn't. Goldman often includes long parenthesis in which he bitches about his frigid wife or his snotty son, or over some of the stunted romantic liaisons that he failed at. All in all, I must say, that the actual narrator of PB comes off as an ego maniacal and pathetic loser who happens to have been the screenwriter for some awesome movies (think "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid," "Misery." (One interesting aside is the confrontation between Goldman and Stephen King over supposedly abridging the sequel to PB, called Buttercup's Baby, a conversation in which they discuss Kathy Bates' performance in "Misery.")

Once you get over the self-loathing and self-loving that the narrator is indulging in while writing this book, you get to the actual storyline. Westley hearts Buttercup, but she is to be married to Prince Humperdink. Meanwhile, Inigo Montoya searches for his father's six-fingered murderer, Fezzik plods along like a dumb giant, and about 300 pages into the novel, these 2 team up with Westley in an attempt to steal Buttercup away from Humperdink.

The good news is that some of the movie's best scenes are taken verbatim from the book. Inigo Montoya is as fabulous here as he is in the movie. Actually, even more so, because you get a pretty in depth history of his childhood, his training, his thought process. He is by far the most interesting character in the novel.

The scene with Miracle Max is also as rewarding as it is in the movie, and the funniest scene in the book is the marriage (mawwiage) scene.

Still, a couple interesting scenes do not a great novel make, and for once, I may have found a book that I enjoyed less than its film adaptation! Ring the bells and sound the alarms!!

Ah, and I see God is agreeing with me! I have just looked out of our great scenic window, and the most BEAUTIFUL rainbow has just appeared.

To wrap up, I must say that I was left a bit deflated by The Princess Bride. It has a little zing, a little sappy romance, and a little adventure, but overall, I think I approached it about 15 years too late. Had I read it when I was 10, I'm sure it would still to this day be one of my favorites.

P.S. Take one "Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die." Repeat until it becomes unnerving. Result -- the best scene in the novel and the film, by a landslide. Oh, Inigo. I love you. And in this book, only you. I should pull a Goldman and abridge The Princess Bride and leave in only Inigo's part, and add on to his story line. Food for thought!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Petra In Aotearoa.
2,456 reviews35.4k followers
January 12, 2021
I absolutely loved . It was just a perfect gem in every way, 5 stars was not enough reward for it's brilliance. With that in mind I was hyped to read The Princess Bride and not ready at all for the experience.

When I lived in Jerusalem I used to leave the snowy heights in winter for the perpetual summer of the Dead Sea, the lowest place on earth, about an hour away. Swimming was impossible, the water buoyed you up, rejected you even so that body parts were impossible to keep submerged. It was such fun, an amazing experience, something really special. After that I would run for the deep pools of fresh spring water to wash the salt off my skin. You jump in and sink to the bottom. It is a shock to the brain after the floating on the Dead Sea. You can't prepare yourself for the sinking, it is like an optical illusion, but a sensory one instead. And so it was with the Princess Bride.

For me, it just sank like a stone beneath the consciousness of the fun and perfection of the Silent Gondoliers. There you go. Maybe I will watch the film one day, I hear it is better.
December 22, 2018
DNF at 60%.

How do you even begin to review a much-loved classic when you didn鈥檛 even manage to finish it? I tried. I really tried to like this book. But no, it just wouldn鈥檛 happen. To think this is Kate Daniels鈥� favourite book! To think the Beast Lord himself tells her 鈥渁s you wish鈥� at the end of Magic Burns! Why oh why couldn鈥檛 I like this book?! Oh well, I guess it can鈥檛 be helped.

So, let鈥檚 start from the beginning. I had a problem with this particular edition from the very first pages. First we have the introduction to the 30th edition: I read it and thought 鈥渨ow that was tedious, this Goldman is pretty full of himself isn鈥檛 he?鈥� Okay, so here I am ready to enjoy the story. But no, not happening. First you have to read the introduction to the 25th edition. Seriously? The first introduction wasn鈥檛 annoying enough so the publishers decided to add a second one? Oookay鈥� I know I should have skipped it but I didn鈥檛: more presumptuous blabbering courtesy of Goldman. Who does this guy think he is anyway?! I must admit, I wasn鈥檛 in the best disposition when I started reading the actual story, which probably didn鈥檛 help. Soooo, I finally get to the story, yay! Except not. Before you read the story you have to suffer through Goldman鈥檚 explanation as to why he supposedly decided to retell Morgenstern's tale. I understand this is part of the story too and it鈥檚 not completely uninteresting but at this point I just wanted to read to the freaking Princess Bride! No more Goldman talking about Goldman!

And so the story begins! Surprising as it may sound, I loved it at first. Well, I loved the first chapter. Then it all went downhill pretty fast, or, as we French put it, it collapsed like a souffl茅. To put it plainly: I was bored to death (I said that already didn鈥檛 I?) and I didn鈥檛 like the characters at all. Buttercup: beautiful (yes I got that the first time you wrote it, no need to re-hash every two seconds) and utterly useless. I like my heroines badass and butt-kicking (too much UF I鈥檓 afraid) so Buttercup and I were on a collision course from the start. Westley: is this guy for real? Doesn鈥檛 he have a single flaw? I mean, how perfect can you get? Boring, boring, boring. Come to think of it, what bothered me most here is that the whole thing was so completely, absolutely clich茅 from beginning to end (which is quite ironic when you think of it, since the story is supposed to be a parody of the genre). I guess I should have thought twice about reading the book because it is, after all, a fairytale. Strangely enough, I was expecting a fairytale with a twist, something that would make it less鈥� fairytale-y I guess. Don鈥檛 know why. I did see the movie when it first came out and enjoyed it (as far as I can remember). Then again, I was only a teenager at the time and the whole damsel in distress thing might have appealed to me then.

So there you have it. I didn鈥檛 like it. I don鈥檛 even know why I鈥檓 giving it two stars since I didn鈥檛 even finish it. Oh well, I might not be a fairytale kind of girl but I too have a heart. Make of it what you will.
Profile Image for Sarah.
237 reviews1,215 followers
April 26, 2018
Prince Humperdinck of Florin, an adept hunter but terrible human being, wants to start a war with the neighboring, equally tiny, kingdom of Guilder. To this end he schemes to marry a beautiful peasant lass named Buttercup, market her as Florin鈥檚 sweetheart, have her assassinated, and frame Guilder. In these machinations he is assisted by Count Rugen, a sadist obsessed with measuring pain.

A trio of mercenaries鈥擵izzini the delusional windbag 鈥渄izzying intellect鈥� from Sicily, I帽igo the master Spanish swordsman, and Fezzik the giant Turkish wrestler鈥攁re recruited to stage Buttercup鈥檚 abduction and dispose of her in the general neighborhood of Guilder. But as they traverse the Cliffs of Insanity, they are pursued by the Dread Pirate Roberts, a black-clad masked man whom no giant fist, well-wielded blade, or pompous brilliant mind can stop.

Why is Buttercup so important to Roberts? Is he connected to Westley, Buttercup鈥檚 farm-boy sweetheart who sailed away years ago to seek his fortune?

inconceivable!

William Goldman鈥檚 novel, which satirizes old-fashioned swashbucklers and merrily bulldozes the fourth wall every other page, was published in 1975, but largely overshadowed by the 1987 film adaptation, wherein Goldman wrote the screenplay of his own novel. A central conceit of the story is that Goldman鈥檚 work is a mere abridged version of a longwinded epic by the fictitious S. Morgenstern. The layers of meta-commentary can feel a bit stifling; luckily the film dispenses with Goldman鈥檚 鈥渟cholarly鈥� digressions, using a grandpa reading to his grandson as a framing device instead.

The book is not quite as family-friendly as the movie. In one of the many forewords鈥攖his book has as many forewords as The Return of the King had endings鈥擥oldman finds himself chatting up a bikini-clad woman one-third his age while he鈥檚 supposed to be buying his young son a birthday present (both the woman and the son are fictional).

Then in the epilogue, 鈥淏uttercup鈥檚 Baby,鈥� we see Buttercup teasing Westley into bed with her. It鈥檚 not graphic or salacious at all鈥攓uite tame by adult fiction standards, and substantially less horny than many a modern YA鈥攂ut stuff like this is intrusive and weird when you remember that people show the movie to six-year-olds.

is this a kissing book?

Finally, while I thoroughly enjoyed Goldman鈥檚 asides at first, they can seriously disrupt the story鈥檚 flow at some points and become a chore to slog through. The multiple forwards are too long, especially combined. The Hollywood secrets and Morgenstern gags are hilarious in moderation, but I think he overused them.

The funniest material by far is in the story proper, almost all of which made it into the film:

evil plans

Life is pain

"True love is the best thing in the world, except for cough drops. Everyone knows that" ~Miracle Max (GIF unavailable)

Also, Buttercup鈥檚 horse is named Horse. Goldman tells us she wasn鈥檛 very creative.

The book I recommend for people who love the movie and are very patient.

The movie I recommend for everyone. The jokes work beautifully on screen, and every character is perfectly cast. Watch it today!
Profile Image for Matthew.
1,221 reviews10k followers
May 31, 2015
The book was good, but I think the movie is better. They are very close to each other, but I think the movie cleaned it up quite a bit.
Profile Image for Nicole.
867 reviews2,482 followers
March 24, 2021
This book was so fun!! I actually believed it's an abridged book, Goldman totally got me! I liked the way he wrote The Princess Birde. The silly humor, the amazing characters, the wonderful story, everything was so damn entertaining!!
Profile Image for Sophia Triad.
2,241 reviews3,719 followers
January 12, 2020
My kind of book:
He held up a book then. 鈥淚'm going to read it to you for relax.鈥�
鈥淒oes it have any sports in it?鈥�
鈥淔encing. Fighting. Torture. Poison. True Love. Hate. Revenge. Giants. Hunters. Bad men. Good men. Beautifulest Ladies. Snakes. Spiders... Pain. Death. Brave men. Cowardly men. Strongest men. Chases. Escapes. Lies. Truths. Passion. Miracles.鈥�
鈥淪ounds okay,鈥� I said.


My kind of love:
鈥業 love you,鈥� Buttercup said. 鈥業 know this must come as something of a surprise to you, since all I've ever done is scorn you and degrade you and taunt you, but I have loved you for several hours now, and every second, more. I thought an hour ago that I loved you more than any woman has ever loved a man, but a half hour after that I knew that what I felt before was nothing compared to what I felt then. But ten minutes after that, I understood that my previous love was a puddle compared to the high seas before a storm.鈥�

My kind of sacrifice and humbleness:
鈥淚've been saying it so long to you, you just wouldn't listen. Every time you said 'Farm Boy do this' you thought I was answering 'As you wish' but that's only because you were hearing wrong. 'I love you' was what it was, but you never heard.鈥�

My kind of heroes:
鈥淢y name is Inigo Montoya, you killed my father, prepare to die!鈥�

And this book is definitely one of my favourite romantic books of all times!
This is true love 鈥� you think this happens every day?
Profile Image for Dez the Bookworm.
507 reviews307 followers
February 24, 2025
What a beautiful new edition they put out! I love all the extra story added into this edition that is not in other editions and I highly recommend checking it out if you live this story.

Keep in mind, this story is still ALL fiction!!! I鈥檝e read reviews where people are upset because they THINK the author is really talking about himself鈥ut he is not!! The dual story is still all part of the overall story and nothing is true and ads depth to uniqueness of this book.

This makes a great gift and it鈥檚 such a fun fairytale. Full of humor and swashbuckling but also love and intensity, I love the way this good hearted fairytale makes me feel.
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