2026 Book Review #21 – Cinder House by Freya Marske
The second novella I picked up because it got nominated for a Hugo, and one I’m almost certain I never would have touched otherwise. Which makes it an excellent argument for this yearly ritual I put myself through, because it was a very well-done and entertaining read throughout. If one that I find leaves me without too much of particular interest to say about it.
The book is amusingly exactly what the title says it is – Cinderella, except she’s a house. Or, properly, except she dies (is poisoned) at the same time as her father, and then becomes a ghost haunting and to some extent becoming the family home her stepmother and sisters just inherited. Bound to the house, and feeling every bit of damage to it as if it was a wound to her living body, she is quickly tortured and coerced into becoming a perfect servant for her ‘family’, helpless and forced to attend to them for nearly their every waking hour. Even after she discovers a loophole to escape into the city’s public spaces, her existence is a miserable one; her only solaces a warm correspondence with a foreign scholar, a wary friendship with a faerie trickster in the nightly market, and surreptitious excursions to the royal ballet. And then – eligible prince, royal ball, faerie magic but only until midnight, peculiar glass slippers. You more or less know the story.
I have, more or less accidentally, been reading a lot of various fairy-tale retellings over the last little while. This is absolutely not a complaint – done poorly, the genre can either be absolutely insufferable or just painfully twee (or both!), but done well I have a deep and abiding affection for the voice, style and general range of aesthetics. Cinder House was close enough that I found it charming throughout, and that it made use of the novella length to tell the fable it wanted without feeling either padded or rushed. The setting and the mechanics of haunting and different kinds of magic are given as much detail as they need, and aside from the final confrontation (which felt a bit clumsy and rushed) the plot and pacing flowed nicely.
Despite the whole ghost and haunted house thing (and, in an odd fit of political realism, changing the romance to an informal polycule situation involving the prince and the diplomatically advantageous foreign princess he was always going to marry. Because c’mon, magic and ghosts are one thing but be serious), the most interesting changes to most tellings of the fable to me were in characterization. Partially this is because I am easily charmed by shamelessly untrustworthy faerie merchant characters, so the book’s take on the fairy godmother was a delight. But the way the book treats the Wicked Stepmother and -sisters is rather more significant.
The story gives more time and attention to the character of the Wicked Stepmother than possibly any telling I’ve seen, and makes her positively nuanced. Not good, but the text empathizes with her and keeps her a step removed from any of the really sadistic cruelty and abuse Ella is subjected to. The two stepsisters are slightly more developed than the usual one-note caricatures, at least enough to give them distinct identities and personalities, but neither gets anywhere near the development of their mother. A sort of narrative conservation of malice also meant that all the horror and wanton abuse that neither the Stepmother nor the older Stepsister would inflict was all given to the younger instead, who is thus reduced to basically a devil in human skin without a single positive trait displayed at any point throughout the novella.
The book puts more effort into its love story than the original fairy tale (in that it puts any at all), and manages to sell it quite well. Well, to me anyway – I’m hardly the target audience for romantasy, but at novella-length it’s quite palatable. Though the characters of prince and princess were hardly about to leap off the page. They both work, and neither’s painful to read or anything, but compared to Ella, the Stepmother and the Fairy Godmother they did feel closer to cardboard cutouts than living, breathing people.
But anyway, a fun and compelling afternoon read.













