In a literary landscape often dominated by clear-cut heroes and mustache-twirling villains, Soman Chainani’s The School for Good and Evil arrived in 2013 as a subversive, neon-pink and shadow-black breath of fresh air. This debut novel didn't just retell a fairytale; it questioned the very foundation of how we define "good" and "evil," launching a "low-key empire" that now spans seven books and a major Netflix film adaptation. A Tale of Two Misfits
The story begins in the isolated village of Gavaldon, where every four years, two children are kidnapped by a mysterious School Master to populate the fabled Schools for Good and Evil. The School for Good and Evil by Soman Chainani
The inciting twist occurs when the girls are dropped into the "wrong" schools: Sophie into the gloom of the School for Evil, and Agatha into the glittering halls of the School for Good. Deconstructing the Fairytale Archetype In a literary landscape often dominated by clear-cut
: Gruff, "ugly," and living in a graveyard with her cat, Agatha is the village's natural candidate for a witch. Her only goal is to protect her best friend, Sophie, from being taken. The inciting twist occurs when the girls are