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Unweaving a Fairy Tale: Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik

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Unweaving a Fairy Tale: Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik

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Published on July 10, 2018

Miryem is the daughter of small town Jewish moneylender who isn’t very good at his job. Her father, while “terrible with money,” is “endlessly warm and gentle, and tried to make up for his failings: he spent nearly all of every day out in the cold woods hunting for food and firewood, and when he was indoors where was nothing he wouldn’t do to help.” But living as they do in a tiny town, “unwalled and half nameless,” where “the cold kept creeping out of the woods earlier and earlier,” where the townspeople look down upon them as pariahs, Miryem’s family is pushed to the edge of poverty, as her father eventually lends out all his wife’s dowry and is incapable of bringing any back. While Miryem’s family are on the verge of starvation, and her mother increasingly unwell, the rest of the town fares well on their borrowed coin.

But in Naomi Novik’s standalone novel Spinning Silver, “a moneylender’s daughter, even a bad moneylender’s daughter, learns her numbers,” and on seeing her mother take ill and weaken, Miryem steps up to lay claim to what is owed to her family.

“I was ready to be as merciless with our neighbours as they’d been with my father,” she says, as she hardens herself to the task she has taken upon herself, remaining unflinchingly on doorsteps until returns are made. Not everyone is able to pay back the coins they had borrowed or the interest owed, but Miryem is enterprising, and finds ways that those who owe her father money can pay her back in kind. Whether it is food or medicine for her mother, or warm furs, Miryem finds a way to recover her father’s loans from each person who owes him—and there are many. “Wrapped in [her] coldness,” she refuses to accept excuses from a man who has drunk away the money he’s borrowed, and instead arranges for his daughter Wanda to work as a housekeeper to pay off the debt. But Miryem, for all her coldness, is not unfair. Wanda is not charged with anything she is incapable of doing, is fed far better than she is at home, and finds that the prospect of a four-year stint spending days away from her violent father in the company of Miryem’s family makes her heart “glad as birds.” Wanda becomes an imperative part of Miryem’s family, and to the narrative at large.

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Spinning Silver

Spinning Silver

Miryem, it is soon clear, is an excellent money collector. Not just that—she’s able to “turn” silver coins into gold. Her grandfather gives her a small amount of money that she is cleverly able to use to buy things she can resell for profit, and even her far more experienced moneylender grandfather is impressed by her knack for quick, high yield investments. She begins by buying two dresses for silver and selling them for gold, and this ability to “spin” silver into gold brings a much feared mysterious Staryk stranger to her doorstep.

The Staryk are the frightening, powerful beings from a sort of parallel world to Miryem’s, a world where it is always winter. There are some physical overlaps between their world and the Russian inspired reality of Miryem’s—an actual road leads from the Staryk world into Miryem’s, which can only be opened by the king. It is the king, fascinated by gold, and greedy for the coins Miryem can earn, who shows up at Miryem’s home and demands that she turn his Staryk silver into gold three times over, or he will turn her into ice. He also makes (a possibly facetious) promise to make her his queen if she delivers the increasingly larger quantities of gold he demands, which leads to a series of events that surprise even him, though of course he is bound to keep his word. Because it seems that once she is physically in the Staryk’s world, Miryem’s abilities to change silver to gold are no longer via her business acumen but actual intrinsic magic. No need for Rumplestilskin here—the young girl herself is the one with the power to spin silver to gold.

While the story of Rumplestilskin is indeed used as a basic premise, Novik unweaves the original story, using threads of it to inspire different characters. Miryem doesn’t need someone else’s magic to prove herself worthy of a king. She isn’t the helpless young woman given away by her father to a greedy lord, the girl who doesn’t keep up her end of the bargain—she is far from helpless, and when in positions of impotency, she is quick to address the issue and attempt to take control in whatever way she can.

Novik employs multiple narrative voices in Spinning Silver, a number of perspectives making up this deftly woven and highly immersive fairy tale, with all threads connecting eventually in a satisfying way. The primary voices are of three young women—Miryem, Wanda, and Irina—each with her own fate to rewrite. Irina is the daughter of a duke, a girl whose father is constantly disappointed that she is not beautiful and may not make a good match, yet Irina finds herself somehow marrying the tsar himself, a strange young man whose cruelty she has witnessed when they were children. The tsar, however, is not an ordinary young man—not even an ordinary spoilt young noble. He has his own demons to bear, and Irina must find a way to not just save herself from him but also her people from his rule. Her story and Miryem’s and Wanda’s all tie together, as the three young women must use all their intuition and smarts to find ways out of the situations they are trapped in, as well as save many others from.

“I didn’t have a country to do it for. I only had people,” says Miryem, reminding us that this is very much also a story about Lithuanian Jews. There is plenty of anti-semitism against Miryem and her family, and while she understands that the townspeople “didn’t have a right to hate [her] but they would anyway” because she “was their monster … the one they could see and understand and imagine tearing down.”

2015’s Uprooted and Spinning Silver are not connected stories. Their similarities lie in their fairy tale impossibilities made possible, their focus on female characters with agency and the relationships they form when relying on each other. In this very atmospheric, sprawling yet so well crafted fairy tale, Novik reminds us that all we can do when faced with what seems to be inevitable doom, is to hold the ones we love close, and fight against the despair, because that “is all we can do for each other in the world, to keep the wolf away.”

Spinning Silver is available from Del Rey.

Mahvesh loves dystopian fiction & appropriately lives in Karachi, Pakistan. She writes about stories & interviews writers the Tor.com podcast Midnight in Karachi when not wasting much too much time on Twitter.

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Mahvesh Murad

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