The Beautiful (The Beautiful #1) audiobook
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Review #1
The Beautiful (The Beautiful #1) audiobook free
When this book was announced, everyone was like, “Woohoo! Vampires are back!” And I was sitting there in the corner, swathed in black and clutching a glass of wine, thinking to myself, “Fools! For some of us, vampires never left.” You see, I love vampire stories and always have. For many, TWILIGHT was the “gateway book” into vampire fiction, but I’d been reading L.J. Smith’s Night World and Bram Stoker’s Dracula and Amelia Atwater-Rhodes’s Den of Shadows years before it came out; Lost Boys was my favorite movie, and I was trying (but failing) to cultivate Anne Rice, as I much-preferred the chunkier books of Chelsea Quinn Yarbro with their dense historic montages, and entire paragraphs that are odes to food and fashion as written by someone with a deep and undying passion for history. So, in short, I freaking love vampires. I want you to keep that in mind, that this review is being written by someone who is obsessed and has been for a while. It is important.
THE BEAUTIFUL is about a girl named Celine who lives in a convent with a bunch of other girls in 19th century New Orleans. A beautiful terror is stalking the city, killing innocent girls. Celine is laboring under a “dark” secret that she must keep hidden at all costs. There’s a secret society of beautiful people who are more than they seem. Everything is beautiful, even death– because for some, it is not the end. *evil laughter*
(Seriously, why haven’t I been hired on as a blurb-writer, yet?)
I don’t want to go too deep in to the plot for spoilers’ sake, but there’s a love triangle between a mysterious, possibly supernatural boy and a police officer. The “attraction” between both is suspect, as Celine goes from hating both these boys to finding them charming basically overnight. There’s a secret society that ends up welcoming Celine and she finds herself the obsession of a depraved and self-absorbed evil guy who likes to wax on and on about how powerful and artistic he is in his first person interludes, which had me rolling my eyes a little. Not much happens– there’s fancy dresses and some murders, but between that there’s a whole lot of nothing and Celine’s “dark secret” is actually kind of horrible (and not in a good way), and I honestly don’t understand why it was such a big deal or why she felt so guilty about it. Celine is such a passive heroine and I really didn’t like her.
Oh– and the book with no resolution. Because there’s a sequel.
Here’s my person issue with Renee Ahdieh: all of her book summaries sound amazing. She writes books that, without picking them up and going only by the summary, sound exactly like the types of books I want to read. A retelling of Arabian Nights? YES. A retelling of the Ballad of Mulan? YES. A vampire story set in New Orleans and laced with Gothic elements? YES YES YES. But then I pick them up, and each time, like Boo Boo the fool from Yogi Bear, I end up finding myself betrayed all over again as I encounter not awesomeness, but very empty, pretty writing that is too busy being mired in its own overwrought nature to move the plot along; cardboard characters; and plots that literally take 400+ pages to accomplish what could have been done in 250. WHY.
The biggest problem that I personally have with THE BEAUTIFUL is that it is a conglomeration of elements that appear to be borrowed or inspired by vampire stories that already did it better, and it still isn’t a good book. The hero’s name, for example, is Bastien Saint Germain and I did wonder if that was taken from or inspired by the alchemist, Count of St. Germain, especially since Sebastian’s uncle is actually a count. He was a fascinating historical figure who made all sorts of weird claims, like that he was actually 500 years old. You might think that would make him ripe for being incorporated into a vampire myth, and you would be right, only Chelsea Quinn Yarbro– that author I mentioned earlier– actually already did that, with her Saint-Germain series.
The concept of angsty and flamboyant vampires living it up in New Orleans is also not new or novel, as that was done by Anne Rice with her Vampire Chronicles series– which then set the mode for ceaseless imitations and fanfic (despite Rice’s “no fanfic” policy), especially in the 2000s, when Interview with a Vampire was made into a movie with Brad Pitt and Tom Cruise, and everyone suddenly decided that a vampire was a nobody unless he or she spoke with a French accent and wore a ruffled and very expensive cravat. Another similarity is that Anne Rice’s hero is named “Lestat de Lioncourt” and the paranormal entourage Celine encounters in THE BEAUTIFUL is called “The Court of Lions.”
You also can’t look at that cover and tell me that it isn’t trying– either actively or subconsciously– to capitalize on the nostalgia and the branding of the TWILIGHT books. The black/white/red color scheme, the font choices, and the central photograph set against the black cover are all very reminiscent of the Twilight series’ cover art, as well as several paranormal copycats that rose to prominence at the peak of the YA paranormal craze.
To clarify, I’m not rating low because of these similarities, but because if the author was reading and researching into all these different worlds to write her own vampire book and still managed to write something that was mediocre and uninspired, that is 100% on her. What I think Renee Ahdieh was trying to do was to write a book that would appeal not just to her YA audience, but also to vampire fans who would notice all of these vampire references and clap their hands in excitement at each bat-winged Easter egg. That, if that is what she was trying to do, is not a bad tactic in principle and it really could have worked if this book had actually been what I, as a vampire fan, look for in fiction.
I have no problem with books that were inspired by something else and have Easter eggs and clever winks and nods to their original sources if they do a good job and pay proper homage to what they’re inspired by. That technique was precisely what made READY PLAYER ONE so popular. It was greater than the sum of its parts, but each individual part was also special on its own. Authors also should read, and actively, in the genres they want to write because it teaches them not just what they should do, but also what they shouldn’t do. I’ve read books that were clearly inspired by other books but managed to do them better, case in point: Pippa DaCosta’s Messenger Chronicles, clearly inspired by the paranormal science-fiction books of the 1960s and 70s, only with a strong female protagonist instead of an outmoded white guy with questionable morality.
No, I’m rating low because this could have been the READY PLAYER ONE for vampire lovers, and it ended up being a tired, washed out imitation. That’s a crying shame.
If you are new to vampire fiction or like Renee Ahdieh’s, um, unique writing style, then you will probably really enjoy this book. She has a pretty devoted fanbase and must be doing something right, even if I personally can’t appreciate it. But if you are a veteran of books in the vampire genre and were hoping for something new or homage-worthy, or have been burned by Ahdieh’s books in the past as I was and hoping that maybe she’d changed her tune, you should probably save yourself the disappointment and avoid this book.
Thanks to the publisher for sending me a copy in exchange for an honest review!
1.5 to 2 out of 5 stars
Review #2
The Beautiful (The Beautiful #1) audiobook streamming online
It breaks my heart to rate a Renee Ahdieh book less than a four or a five! I received a copy of Wrath and the Dawn prior to its official release, spoke to Renee in a Texas Library Association signing line, at a smaller YA event and in the exhibit hall as we both were milling about and was impressed with her enthusiasm and her comments about how unnecessary it was to resort to explicit sexual content when passion could be just as easily expressed with creative use of excellent vocabulary. I love the novels and some of the novellas in her first series, but have been a bit underwhelmed by her other works. That being said, YA readers in the school district where I serve as librarian will be all over this one like white on rice. I can see the 9th and 10th grade girls huddling together to figure out who is slaughtering innocents in New Orleans and trying to unravel the mystery of exactly what creatures make up the elite group called the Court of Lions. Strong, beautiful, dont take any crap from anyone Celine will appeal to them all and maybe even spur a few more mild mannered young ladies to stick up for themselves when insulted or even attacked by others. Most readers in grades 9-12 are likely to rate this new other-worldly vampire offering with 4 or 5 stars. My complaints are fairly simple: Major redundancy in descriptions of Bastiens attractiveness and demeanor, an otherwise strong Celine who wallows in guilt over a past event, Michaels character was not terribly well-developed but becomes critical at the conclusion and will likely be a major component of subsequent books, a let down feeling when the killer is unmasked, and a setting in 1872 New Orleans that fails to really convey the history of the time. Not to mention a completely unnecessary F-bomb which means that our junior high will be unlikely to purchase this one and an almost sex scene that may add another reason that our district may only have it on high school shelves. Ending with a positive notethe last few pages dropped a big surprise that will probably mean that I will read the next book even with my 3 star rating!!
Review #3
Audiobook The Beautiful (The Beautiful #1) by Renée Ahdieh
The writer is so, so long-winded. Her descriptions are beautiful but much too lengthy. I didnt understand most of the characters motivations- several would become furious at nothing. The members of The Court were all forgettable, and I didnt even care about the main characters after a while. Desperate to just finish this, I was irritated to discover it ends with a lame cliffhanger.
Review #4
Audio The Beautiful (The Beautiful #1) narrated by Lauren Ezzo
I don’t think I can even begin to convey just how much I absolutely love vampire books. It doesn’t matter what age group it is intended for, if it has vampires in it, I am sure to love it. Just want to get my biases out there in the open before I tell you that this is one of the best vampire books I have read so far this year! It has everything in it that I love in a vampire book: a slow burn romance, gothic architecture, dreamy settings (including Paris and New Orleans), lush and gorgeous prose, and of course, vampires.
The writing seriously impressed me. I really grew to love Celine and Sebastien and found myself rooting for them throughout the whole book. And despite the luxuriousness of the story, I was hooked from page one and rushed through it to get to the end.
A wonderful read!
Review #5
Free audio The Beautiful (The Beautiful #1) – in the audio player below
The story was okay
I wasnt really gripped
I dont know why it was set in 1870 it doesnt really seem relevant apart from the fashion, of which there were a lot of references
Celine says she falls in love with New Orleans but I dont know why she doesnt really seem to do enough or see much of it
I didnt particularly like the female lead that much and the way her relationships developed seemed far too quick
Bastien seemed like a really likeable character and pretty well balanced so I dont know why he was referred to as the devil or dark prince
I just felt this story was lacking a bit really, I liked some of the characters and the descriptions of food
The idea is promising
I guest the big reveal fairly early on but I wasnt disappointed by it
I will read the sequel to see how the rest of the story pans out
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