Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Books I've Loved: A Great and Terrible Beauty


This is another one of those books that on the surface, I shouldn't like.  Yet I loved it.  I loved the whole trilogy.  I usually don't read fantasy and there isn't much more fantastic than schoolgirls discovering a way into another world complete with fairies and monsters.  But despite these elements that usually make me groan, roll my eyes and toss the book away, I couldn't put this one down.

The characters are so vivid and real and the fantasy world they visit is so dark and twisted, I couldn't help but be hooked.

But if you don't trust me on it, here's the blurb...

A Victorian boarding school story, a Gothic mansion mystery, a gossipy romp about a clique of girlfriends, and a dark other-worldly fantasy—jumble them all together and you have this complicated and unusual first novel. 
Sixteen-year-old Gemma has had an unconventional upbringing in India, until the day she foresees her mother's death in a black, swirling vision that turns out to be true. Sent back to England, she is enrolled at Spence, a girls' academy with a mysterious burned-out East Wing. There Gemma is snubbed by powerful Felicity, beautiful Pippa, and even her own dumpy roommate Ann, until she blackmails herself and Ann into the treacherous clique. Gemma is distressed to find that she has been followed from India by Kartik, a beautiful young man who warns her to fight off the visions. Nevertheless, they continue, and one night she is led by a child-spirit to find a diary that reveals the secrets of a mystical Order. The clique soon finds a way to accompany Gemma to the other-world realms of her visions "for a bit of fun" and to taste the power they will never have as Victorian wives, but they discover that the delights of the realms are overwhelmed by a menace they cannot control. Gemma is left with the knowledge that her role as the link between worlds leaves her with a mission to seek out the "others" and rebuild the Order. A Great and Terrible Beauty is an impressive first book in what should prove to be a fascinating trilogy.

3 comments:

  1. Interesting. I'm not normally a fan of gothic stories, but I have been looking for something new to read lately.

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  2. I've heard of Libba Bray, but for a different book - I don't remember what... She's pretty famous, and I'm glad you got hooked and enjoyed it!

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  3. Ooh, what a wicked sounding story!!!

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