The Last Wish

The first book in The Witcher series by Andrzej Sapkowski, originally in Polish but translated to English after the game became popular.

Consists of six short stories framed by a seventh narration. While not an immediate part of "The Witcher Saga" (which spans books three through seven), it introduces most of its protagonists (Geralt, Yennifer, Dandelion) and foreshadows Ciri's origin story.


 * The Voice of Reason. The Framing Story. While Geralt recuperates from his injuries at the Temple of Melitele, Head Priestess Nenneke makes him retell some of his adventures.
 * The Witcher. A deconstruction of Save the Princess plots.
 * A Grain of Truth. A gleeful deconstruction of "Beauty and The Beast".
 * The Lesser Evil. An In Name Only deconstruction of "Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs".
 * A Question of Price. A critical look at the fairy tales like "Rumpelstiltskin", where a supernatural being asks for "what you don't expect to find back home".
 * The Edge of the World. A deconstruction of Our Elves Are Better, among other things.
 * The Last Wish. A deconstruction of "Aladdin".

As you may have noticed, the book is mainly a Deconstructor Fleet of classical Fairy Tales.

Tropes found in the book:

 * The Butcher of Blaviken: Geralt in The Lesser Evil.
 * Anachronic Order: The Voice of Reason is set immediately after the The Witcher, which is chronologically the last adventure Geralt recalls. The rest seem to follow each other, though.
 * Everything's Better with Princesses: averted with Princess Adda in The Witcher, who was the result of an incestuous affair between the King and his sister and spends the first fourteen years of her life as a striga, and again in Lesser Evil, which features a sociopathic leader of a warband, who happens to be a princess by birth.
 * Fractured Fairy Tale
 * Non Indicative Title: More like, deliberately misleading (both in original Polish and English translation). "The Last Wish" refers not to a Last Request but.
 * Prophecies Rhyme All the Time: One of the arguments why Renfri is not some kind of mutant - the Black Sun prophecy claims "sixty women in crowns of gold, which will fill the rivers with blood". It's obviously not a proper prophecy, as Geralt points out, it doesn't rhyme.
 * The Ithlinne Prophecy on the other hand does rhyme, at least in original Elven...
 * Riddle for the Ages: Just what exactly wished for with his last wish?
 * Traumatic Superpower Awakening: Hiring Geralt to kill the boyfriend of a latent sorceress was a bad idea.
 * Yandere: The Bruxa in A Grain of Truth