Sunday, 10 July 2022

A Great and Terrible Beauty


Book Title: A Great and Terrible Beauty
Author: Libba Bray
Series: Gemma Doyle #1
Date Started: July 2nd 2022
Date Completed: July 6th 2022
Genres: Fantasy, Historical, Mystery
Quality Rating: Three Stars
Enjoyment Rating: Two Star
Final Rating: Two Stars
Review:

While I really love Libba Bray's Diviners series, I really wasn't feeling this. There are echoes of Evie in all these narcissistic ambitious girls, but none of her complexity and depth brought out by the other varying characters in that series. Gemma felt like she was heading that way and then decided not to bother; I'm all for girls not having to be goody goody two shoes, but I don't feel like rooting for a petty bystander either.

I'm not a massive fan of boarding school settings for exactly this reason - it's just petty bullying and whining and hardly any stakes, all justified by the amazingly basic revelation that bullies are humans and often have their own insecurities. Something which becomes even more infuriating when this is used to completely excuse their behaviour. It's not a massive surprise to me that I didn't like any of the characters and found it very hard to feel for them, even the ones being bullied who only then cared about being part of the clique and routinely become petty and spiteful to stay in the populars' good graces. I was hoping for something dramatic but was mostly expecting it to be the supernatural force after the girls. That, sadly, turned out not to be very dramatic.

The plot relies too much on convenient appearances from random characters so that the scene doesn't actually have to play out to its peak of tension. You'd like this was leading up to some massive reveal to the mystery thrown in our faces the whole way through, but alas, the mystery itself ends up feeling pretty trivial and easily solved (if you hadn't worked it out in the first couple of chapters).

All the above are honestly pet peeves of mine, but I've been known to get along with novels that feature them before. The problem with A Great and Terrible Beauty was that there felt like there were no stakes at all. Every time something creepy or mysterious happened, it was suddenly cut short or resolved immediately, with next to no build-up. And you complain all you want about how restrictive corsets were (which is factually incorrect) or women's lack of power, but for all the scandalous rule-breaking every single woman in the story seems to be a part of, no one seems to experience any consequences whatsoever. You've got scandalised unmarried women having new identities for themselves, moving into flats by themselves, with apparently no means at their disposal. (And yes, there is supposed to be a supernatural power after these girls - but who would know from how little it's in it).

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