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The Beast's Heart

A Novel of Beauty and the Beast

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A luxuriously magical retelling of Beauty and the Beast set in seventeenth-century France—and told from the point of view of the Beast himself.
I am neither monster nor man—yet I am both. I am the Beast.
He is a broken, wild thing, his heart’s nature exposed by his beastly form. Long ago cursed with a wretched existence, the Beast prowls the dusty hallways of his ruined château with only magical, unseen servants to keep him company—until a weary traveler disturbs his isolation.
Bewitched by the man’s dreams of his beautiful daughter, the Beast devises a plan to lure her to the château. There, Isabeau courageously exchanges her father’s life for her own and agrees to remain with the Beast for a year. But even as their time together weaves its own spell, the Beast finds winning Isabeau’s love is only the first impossible step in breaking free from the curse....
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    • Booklist

      January 1, 2019
      Shallcross' debut is a retelling of Beauty and the Beast from the beast's point of view. After the beast tricks her father into taking one of his roses, Isabeau arrives at his dusty chateau and agrees to keep him company for a year. Over the months, their friendship develops through poetry, music, and magical-house-provided fireworks and mulled wine, despite Isabeau's mysterious nightmares and the Beast's continued proposals in his hopes of breaking the spell. Parts of the story remain overly attached to classic versions of this tale: the Beast's despondency often comes off as emotionally manipulative, and the end-goal for all of the women in the novel is portrayed as marriage. But Shallcross does well to use the magic mirror as a device giving the reader a window into the social world of Isabeau's family; unlike in the original tale, Isabeau's sisters redeem themselves, becoming contented, hard-working women. Isabeau and her two sisters provide the emotional core of Shallcross' retelling, and the emotion-rich romances and family relationships of this book are what keep it so compelling.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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