Friday 28 January 2011

Beauty By Robin McKinley (4/5)

This is the first book in a while that I have found myself falling into, I read it in less than two days, whilst moving house and interviewing for jobs in a new country. I didn't care, they could wait. It was only The Book that mattered. : ) This happens quite rarely for me these days, so when I find myself unable to put a book down I just let myself go with the flow.

Beauty and The Beast is my favourite Disney film and one of my favourite films of all time. I don't care if it's meant to be for children, I fell in love with it when I was 6 and apparently it was a love that would last a lifetime. I still have the original VHS that I used to watch as a child and just got the DVD for Christmas.(*squeal*) I watched it three times in one week and feel no shame about this. Small town heroine yearns to escape, achieve more in life and have adventures? Me like. So, with this in mind it was with great trepidation that I picked this book off of the shelf. I'd been disappointed in a Beauty & The Beast novel before, (Beastly Review) Though I'd heard good things about Robin McKinley, I've been meaning to pick up something by her for ages, so when I saw this I couldn't resist. Also I really liked the simple cover, the white background with black and red detail is very striking.

Firstly in this story, I loved the main character of Beauty and the way that the story spent nearly half of the book developing her character and her relationship with her family before sending her to The Beast's castle. Far too often in some novels I've finished them thinking that the heroine had far too little personality, this was not the case with this book at all. Beauty was strong and independent, and I liked how she responded the best out of her family to their new labouring life in the country. You could feel a real sense of achievement when she was able to find a place in the new town and discover jobs that she could do well. The trials of her family and their personal journey from a life of indulgence to hard work and semi poverty was a great story on it's own, separate from Beauty's interactions with The Beast. This part of the story was written so well that even though The Beast doesn't enter the story for the first part of the novel, I was still gripped by what would happen to this family, and these characters that I had grown to like.

The characterisation in this story was very well done. Her sisters were very different from her and yet still different from one another. It would have been easy for the author to have made them semi villain like, and yet they were loving and caring, in spite of the differences that made them superior in Beauty's eyes. Grace's loyalty and dedication to a lost love was quite touching, and I felt it made her character feel deeper, I was really hoping that she would find happiness. Hope's desire to settle with someone who many would think beneath her, gave an interesting twist to her character. The life that her and Ger made together was quaint and lovely, I liked the way that she responded to married life, and thought that as a couple they were nice to read about.

I found that Beauty's exploration of the enchanted castle was written very well. It captured the elegance and grand scale of the place very well. It was so well described that I could practically see it, the tall towers piercing the sky, and the grounds stretching out in front of the large castle doors. Throughout all of the descriptions of this marvellous place I was gripped by Beauty's views on it, her wonder and fear, her strength and yet hesitance. It was all great reading.

The Beast's characterisation is the only part of the story that I'm a little unsure of. I liked that he was stiffly formal in some ways, his complete acceptance that he would look terrifying to Beauty and that this was something that just had to be dealt with, was an interesting point of view. I loved the way that the characters spoke to one another, particularly when dining together. However, outside of Beauty's perspective it was sometimes hard to see the depth of The Beast's love for her. His formality in this matter made him seem somewhat cold, and it's hard to think of a character as being in love if they don't show a certain kind of weakness and vulnerability. This was communicated very well sometimes, one being when Beauty fainted on him and her subsequent reaction and anger, and again when she managed to get Greatheart to approach him, even though the horse was determined to bolt. I would have liked to have seen more examples of the depth of his fragility, as these were some of my favourite parts of the book.

The development of Beauty's feelings however were done wonderfully. I thought it was a great idea that she didn't even realise that she cared about him until she found herself defending him against her family's judgement. I liked the gradual dependence she began to have on him, even though she was still afraid from time to time. The solitary lifestyle she suffered made the small time she spent with him the highlight of her day. There was a certain feel of Stockholm Syndrome about the whole thing in some ways. :S Her change of opinion towards The Beast was so gradual that it's hard to pin point when it actually changed, and in my experience this means it has been written well.

The whole story had a certain poetical style about it and the writing style was beautiful and yet didn't detract from the story at all. The world building was brilliant and allowed you to fall into the story in many different ways, all of the different environments described were so three dimensional that you want to wander around them, from the small town that the family finds themselves making a life in, to the enchanted forest and the castle beyond.

The book was a pleasure to read and the whole world was one that I was unwilling to leave when the story ended. I think that a bookish heroine like Beauty would enjoy to read it very much.

0 comments:

Post a Comment