Fairest by Marissa Meyer

Fairest (Lunar Chronicles, #3.5)

by Marissa Meyer

Prepare to see the New York Times-bestselling series like you've never seen it before, now with new cover art!

A standalone prequel to the #1 New York Times- and USA Today-Bestselling Lunar Chronicles series by Marissa Meyer! Find out what made the evil space queen from the beloved series so wicked.

An interesting mash up of fairy tales and science fiction . . . a cross between Cinderella, Terminator, and Star Wars. --Entertainment Weekly

Prince Charming among the cyborgs. --The Wall Street Journal

Mirror, mirror, on the wall.
Who is the Fairest of them all?

Pure evil has a name, hides behind a mask of deceit, and uses her glamour to gain power. But who is Queen Levana? Long before she crossed paths with Cinder, Scarlet, and Cress in The Lunar Chronicles, Levana lived a very different story--a story that has never been told . . . until now.

New York Times
-bestselling author Marissa Meyer reveals the story behind her fascinating villain in Fairest, an unforgettable tale about love and war, deceit and death. This extraordinary book includes a special full-color image of Levana's castle and an excerpt from Winter, the exciting conclusion to The Lunar Chronicles.

Don't miss these other books from #1 New York Times- and USA Today-Bestselling author Marissa Meyer:

The Lunar Chronicles:
Cinder
Scarlet
Cress
Winter
Stars Above
Fairest
The Lunar Chronicles Coloring Book

Wires and Nerve: Vol. 1
Wires and Nerve: Vol. 2

Renegades:
Renegades: Book One
Archenemies: Book Two
Supernova: Book Three

Heartless

Reviewed by Briana @ Pages Unbound on

3 of 5 stars

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Marissa Meyer’s unexpected addition to the Lunar Chronicles series, Fairest takes readers back to the years before Levana was queen of the moon, and before she was plotting to conquer the earth, to tell the story of who Levana really is and how the political problems of Cinder (Lunar Chronicles #1) all began.

Villain origin stories like this one are always risky. Authors chance either undermining the delicious evilness of their villains by saying, “Hey, look, they were once good and sadly misunderstood” or diminishing the credibility of their villains by implying, “Why, yes, they were always evil. They were definitely born that way. Inherent evilness is a thing.” Meyer nicely avoids both problems by presenting young Levana as a delightfully complex character who walks the knife edge of having good intentions while being unmistakably unhinged. Readers have the pleasure of seeing her alternately performing good actions for all the wrong reasons and performing wrong actions for all the right reasons. Sure, Levana has a tragic backstory involving neglectful parents, but Meyer does not leave readers with this overly simply explanation for Levana’s selfishness. She adds layer upon layer to Levana’s tale, including a subtle hint that her sister may have addled her brain by using her Lunar gift too much on her while she was a child, until readers can no longer point and say, “I have definitely found the one reason Levana’s a villain.”

However, Levana’s complexity and the tour through her psychological make-up is really the high point of the book. Of course, it has a plot, and fans of the Lunar Chronicles can imagine it’s quite an interesting plot, if Levana is the driving force behind it. Nonetheless, Fairest still seems to be caught somewhere between wanting to be a novella and wanting to be a full-fledged novel. The individual events of the plot are enticing, but the overall structure falls flat. The book seems too often to be signaling its connection to the other Lunar Chronicles books (“Hey, it’s baby Cinder!” “Hey, this is the start of the warrior program!”), so readers may leave with the sense that Fairest is mainly trying to fill in existing story gaps for current Lunar Chronicles fans and not really trying to stand on its own.

Fairest is imaginative and complex. In a short space, Meyer deftly builds the world of Luna and presents an array of skillfully drawn characters. Levana may steal the show, but her sister and the love interest are also strong contenders for the attention of readers. Add to this a plot full of escapades, alternately moving or shocking, and Fairest is practically destined for success. However, it still ends up feeling underdeveloped. (Note that the publisher threw in three preview chapters of Winter at the end, just to bulk the physical book up.) I gave Fairest three stars on Goodreads because one of its main appeals is that Lunar Chronicles fans will have fun “getting” all the references. Readers who start the series with this book will probably have a more subdued experience.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 5 February, 2015: Finished reading
  • 5 February, 2015: Reviewed