About Elisabeth and Edvard’s World Box Set
Five novels, four lesser-known fairytales and all the upliftment your heart could desire!
Fairytales brought to life. Immerse yourself in this collection of retellings of lesser-known fairytales.
Includes retellings of:
Grimm fairytales: Brother and Sister, and The Nixie of the Mill-pond (HEA)
Ballet: Giselle (please note, this stays true to the tragic nature of the original tale)
Andersen: The Tinderbox (HEA)
The perfect recipe for your satisfaction:
Take the characters from a forgotten fairytale, add a dash of anxiety and a splash of negative thinking. Sprinkle liberally with the desire to change and add a pinch of hope. Simmer over a gentle heat, gradually turning up the temperature until a roiling boil is reached, where all the ingredients combine to form new and delightful insights, gilded with a generous dose of upliftment.
Buy The Book Here
Visit The Authors Website & Follow Them On Social Media
Follow the Author’s Facebook Page
Check Out The Author’s Instagram
Learn More About The Author
Award-winning and USA Today Bestselling Author, Astrid V.J., was born in South Africa. She is a trained social anthropologist and certified transformational life coach. She currently resides in Sweden with her husband and their two children. In early childhood, she showed an interest in reading and languages—interests which her family encouraged. Astrid started writing her first novel at age 12 and now writes fantasy in a variety of genres, exploring her passion for cultures and languages. When she isn’t writing, Astrid likes to read, take walks in nature, play silly games with her children, do embroidery, and play music.
Astrid writes transformation fiction: incorporating transformation principles in novels, rather than writing another self-help book. She loves exploring the human capacity for transformation and potential to achieve success in the face of adversity. Astrid is interested in minority group questions, considerations on social standards of beauty and the negative consequences these have, and would like to make the fantasy genre accessible to people of non-white, non-Christian backgrounds. Astrid feels the fantasy genre has become too restrictive with limited representations of race, ethnicity and culture. She seeks to explore other paths on this writing journey, incorporating her background in anthropology and psychology to create engaging experiences, which also provide food for thought on the diverse topics she finds most important. These include: racism, minority rights, cultural diversity, culture change, intolerance, humanity’s environmental impact, the representation of people on the autism spectrum among the general populace, the human capacity for transformation, and much more.