
The Modern Fairies
by Clare Pollard
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256
8 Jul 2025
Paperback
Penguin Books, Limited
Penguin UK
9780241672464
SHORTLISTED FOR THE TADEUSZ BRADECKI PRIZE
'A novel with oodles of charm' The Times
'Elegant, decadent, vulgar, clever, enchanting and dark' Sarah Perry, author of Enlightenment
Versailles, 1682: a city of the rich, a living fairy-tale, Louis XIV's fever dream. It's a place of opulence, beauty, and power. But strip back the lavish exterior of polite society, and you'll find a dark undercurrent of sexual intrigue and vicious gossip. Nobody is safe here - no matter how highly born they are.
No one knows this better than Madame Marie d'Aulnoy. Each week, a rogue group of intellectuals gather at her Parisian home to debate, flirt and perform Contes de Fées - fairy tales - that challenge the status quo, at a salon that will change the course of literature forever. But while they weave tales of glass slippers, enchanted beasts and long-haired princesses, a wolf is lurking, who threatens to destroy the members of the salon one by one.
Brilliant and bawdy, romantic and provocative, The Modern Fairies is a dazzling novel inspired by real events, about the delights and dangers of storytelling in dark times.
'Funny, filthy, dancingly clever ... A delectable confection of many-layered pleasures ... I gobbled it all up, Joanna Quinn, author of The Whalebone Theatre
'The sentences sing on the page with wit and intelligence ... Reminds the reader of the enduring power of storytelling to transform and even save lives, then and now' The New York Times
A novel about stories and who gets to tell them, set in the literary salons of France during the reign of Louis XIV. Madame d'Aulnoy, Charles Perrault and their associates gather to retell the stories told to them by "rustics" and servants, creating a new tradition of "Contes de Fées" , arch fairytales intended for adult entertainment. But they tread a fine line, as the King has his spies, and he has little patience for even veiled criticism of him or the society he presides over. Pollard presents the fairytales themselves as they are retold, and the vicissitudes of the court are described using poetic motifs and language which would not be out of place in one of the tales. A sweet, poisonous delight.
