In Review: Beautiful Creatures
Released:
December 1, 2009 563
pages
Publisher: Little,
Brown Books for Young Readers; 1 edition
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 0316042676
Beautiful
Creatures is the latest fan favorite YA book to get the movie treatment. And I’ll
admit I have high hopes for the series. While it’s rife with the normal teen
angst, there’s something deeper below that shallow surface that some other YA
franchises banked on. The story unfolds a smart, modern fantasy landscape, with
a tale of star-crossed lovers that have more than families or ideas standing in
their way of happiness.
Ethan Wate
is your typical high school sophomore in the small town of Gatlin. He’s
athletic, and part of the in crowd, and desperately counting down the days
until he can break free from the town’s confines and experience the outside
world. He’s a reader and a dreamer, and he’s been plagued with nightmares of a
girl he can’t see and a song he can’t escape.
Enter the
beautiful and mysterious Lena Duchannes, the girl of his dreams literally, and
the niece of the town shut in. If there was ever a wrong girl to fall in love
with in this tiny Southern town, Lena is her. Not only do the pompom pushers instantly despise
her and set out to crucify her, all of Ethan’s so called friends abandon him
with the exception of his only true friend Link, for his inseparable
relationship.
Still Ethan
and Lena can’t help to be drawn to each other, as unforeseen forces threaten to
tear them apart. Not only are their families against their relationship, but so
is fate. Lena comes from a long line of cursed casters, and upon her sixteenth
birthday she will be claimed for good or evil. As the two of them try to
untangle history, and save Lena from her destiny, they still have to contend
with the horrors of high school.
Beautiful
Creatures is not only well written, and well paced, it gives us a relationship
that is truly special. Although Ethan is a mere mortal, there’s power in his
love for Lena, which few can match. Rather than just saying that their love is
special or unique, it’s illustrated brilliantly. What’s skipped is all of the
covert stares, all the yearning, and the story gets to the heart of two people
drawn together against all odds.
Ethan’s
voice is a fresh alternative, to the normal girl point of views. He’s as much
on the outside looking in on the Caster stage as the rest of us, and it makes
sense for this world to unfold though his eyes rather than Lena’s. For Kami
Garcia and Maragret Stohl’s first
outing, it is certainly an entertaining one, that has given us a magical world
I cannot wait to see more of.
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