Twice Upon A Time is a children's fiction series consisting of three books: The stories are told in alternating perspectives of two main characters.
She was recently held prisoner by a witch as the result of a deal her parents made when she was born.
Prince Benjamin craved to have a grand adventure travelling minstrels would compose songs about.
He also found although the boy's father was excellent at making spectacles, he had to clean dung chutes for a stable income.
At late night, Andrew and Benjamin were furtively eating plum cakes in the kitchen.
Benjamin admitted he wished for a way to prove himself and help the spectacle maker to work in his dream career.
A large, hairy troll guarded the entrance, so not even the bravest knights dared to approach it.
After a failed attempt at climbing down the tower, Rapunzel found a way to escape by looking into the mirror to see behind her when the witch was leaving.
Using the mirror, she watched a person with green skin climb down the rope and drop off her dinner.
She realized it was not the witch who brought her small gifts in her time trapped; it was the green creature.
The next day, Prince Benjamin was given a map of the Great Forest and a book on trolls by Andrew.
In her dinner vegetable stew, she discovered seven peas on top forming a happy face.
On the same day, Rapunzel explained her thinking to Steven: the bug that flew out of his son's mouth was controlled by the witch.
Elkin shot some arrows onto nearby trees and dumped the rest on the ground to indicate the spot the singing was heard.
After tossing the cloak over the bushes so Rapunzel would not be scraped by the prickles, Benjamin was given a pair of glasses.
The hermit revealed that Steven bolted past his cave just before Benjamin and Elkin visited.
She banned all beautiful objects and people from the castle, and sought blood on the second and fourth Thursdays of a month.
A few weeks after Rose's birthday, Sara's mother moved her family to another part of town with a blacksmith and his five children in a tiny house.
When the Prince was fourteen, he discovered a small separation of the vines over a window of the mysterious building.
The Prince saw this as an opportunity to learn more about the history of the castle, so he invited the oldest people in the kingdom and neighboring towns for tea.
At dinner, the Prince encountered a fairy, who told him that the princess could not leave the old castle grounds until his parents have accepted her.
But what if you have a perfect older sister who really should have had your name instead of you?And when you're a prince, you're supposed to be athletic and commanding and brave and tall.
But what if all you like to do is play the bagpipes (badly), study the stars, and try to figure out how to make worms live forever?
And when Prince Riley suddenly grows fur, and nails as sharp as sticks, he has to learn that even a beast's appearance can be deceiving.
Rapunzel: The One with All the Hair has received editorial reviews from both Barnes & Noble and Janice DeLong.
[2] Janice DeLong commented that the novel has a "most satisfactory resolution", and praised that it "fairly sparkles with contemporary attitude and humor".
Sleeping Beauty: The One Who Took the Really Long Nap has received an editorial review from Kathryn Erskine.
She praised the writing as "upbeat, breezy, and clever", and claimed the author did a "superb job".
The reviewer concluded with a lighter note, saying the book is "still...popular with tweens", and recommended it to "librarians looking for light, nonviolent retellings".
Kirkus stated that the plot is "all so clean and lighthearted and safe that readers accustomed to any edge at all might find their teeth aching".