From Goodreads: Fierce, seductive
mermaid Syrenka falls in love with Ezra, a young naturalist. When she
abandons her life underwater for a chance at happiness on land, she is
unaware that this decision comes with horrific and deadly consequences. Almost
one hundred forty years later, seventeen-year-old Hester meets a
mysterious stranger named Ezra and feels overwhelmingly, inexplicably
drawn to him. For generations, love has resulted in death for the women
in her family. Is it an undiagnosed genetic defect ... or a curse?
With Ezra’s help, Hester investigates her family’s strange, sad history.
The answers she seeks are waiting in the graveyard, the crypt, and at
the bottom of the ocean - but powerful forces will do anything to keep her
from uncovering her connection to Syrenka and to the tragedy of so long
ago.
My Rating: 4 hearts
Thoughts
on the Novel: It took a few stories involving mermaids but with Elizabeth
Fama’s Monstrous Beauty, I finally found one that delivered on its promise of
seductive yet vicious mermaids. Combine the dark plot with ghosts, a curse
lasting generations and descriptive imagery, and it’s no wonder that Fama’s book is my favourite mermaid novel
to date! Told from the seamlessly alternating perspectives of the mermaid
Syrenka and the human Hester born almost a century and a half later, Monstrous
Beauty slowly reveals how the lives of these two young women are intertwined.
Although she harbours a crush on her best friend Peter,
Hester remains wary of falling in love. After all, Hester reasons that love
eventually leads to wanting a family – something she can’t afford to have because
every woman in her side of the family dies several days after giving birth.
When Hester encounters Ezra and falls for him suddenly, – I didn’t like the
instalove even if made sense in the grand scheme of things – he helps her
realize that the pattern of deaths may be because of a curse rather than due to
genetics.
I liked Hester; but I thought Syrenka’s
story was much more captivating – and not just because I found Syrenka to be a
more complex character than Hester. First off, Syrenka’s POV allows us to be
privy to knowledge that Hester must discover herself in order to piece together
what happened many, many years earlier. Additionally, the events leading up to
the curse occur during Syrenka’s lifetime and so those events are part of the
present for Syrenka but part of the past for Hester. Although I love history,
it’s more fun to read about events as they’re occurring.
A must read for those looking for an
enthralling mermaid tale, Monstrous
Beauty was released on September 4, 2012
by Farrar, Strous and Giroux.
Comments
About the Cover: I like its simplicity but I feel like it’s a bit too
plain, you know?
In exchange for an honest review, this book was received from the publisher (Random House) for free via NetGalley.