A Great and Terrible Beauty (Gemma Doyle, #1)
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A Great and Terrible Beauty (Gemma Doyle #1)

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3.76 of 5 stars 3.76  ·  rating details  ·  52,892 ratings  ·  4,827 reviews
It’s 1895, and after the suicide of her mother, 16-year-old Gemma Doyle is shipped off from the life she knows in India to Spence, a proper boarding school in England. Lonely, guilt-ridden, and prone to visions of the future that have an uncomfortable habit of coming true, Gemma’s reception there is a chilly one. To make things worse, she’s been followed by a mysterious yo...more
Hardcover, 403 pages
Published December 9th 2003 by Delacorte Books for Young Readers
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Jennie
Jennie rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: teenage chicks; adult women who like escapist fare
Shelves: young-adult
This book is what it is: a young adult novel.

That said, it's a very good one. You can read the summary on the book's page, so I won't go into that here.

I loved the juxtaposition of Victorian England, colonial India, and the fairy world. The protagonist doesn't belong in any of them, and she recognizes that, which sets up the whole story: the outsider tries to find her niche.

I didn't care for any of the other main characters, mostly because I felt that the pr...more
honestly mem
A Great and Terrible Beauty is neither great nor beautiful, though it is indeed -- wait for it! -- terrible.

The characters are simple and one-dimensional, their actions both petty and selfish. I find it difficult to believe any one of the four girls at the heart of the story cared for one another, much less anyone else. The story meanders, often digressing into lengthy passages that do little if anything to advance the characters or the story. As the story progresses, drawing to its ...more
Marissa
I am not someone who can watch scary movies. Now, I like scary movies (not full of blood, but full of suspense) but I have a problem in that I don't stop being scared when they're over (Lady in White, What Lies Beneath). My dad is a big Dean Koontz fan and so I read a book when I was younger. It was so scary--the walls even attacked people! I couldn't walk down our narrow hallway without feeling scared. Irrational? Absolutely. Why am I mentioning this? Well, because this book had a touch of the ...more
Chandra
This is the story of a Victorian era teenager named Gemma Doyle – she is raised in colonial India and after a family tragedy is shipped off to boarding school in London. I’m not giving much away to say that all is not as it seems at Spence Academy and soon Gemma learns that she has magical powers and a secret family history to go along with it.

My first gripe with this novel is that, although the author uses many correct terms and expressions, the narrative is jarringly anachronist...more
Megan
Mysterious Sexy Boy: “So Gemma, isn’t it exciting to be attending your first Grateful Dead concert?”

Gemma Doyle: “Yes, but… Jerry Garcia has been actually dead for years..”

MSB: “Not for the purpose of this review, he isn’t. Just go with it”

GD: *sniff* *sniff* “Hmmm… what’s that smell?” *giggle* “And why am I suddenly craving pizza with chocolate??” *giggle*

MSB: “Son of a bitch! Gemma, that is second hand marijuana smoke. If you inhale enough you w...more
Cristin
Cristin rated it 3 of 5 stars
Recommends it for: young adult fans
Had I read Libba Bray’s A Great and Terrible Beauty when I was 12-14 years old, this probably would have been close to a favorite of mine. There’s something about the way it is written (Bray’s exploration of insecurity, the quest of finding oneself, budding sexuality and subsequent doubt, yearning and curiosity, conflicts with family, struggling with authority, self-image, etc) that is absolutely perfect for Bray’s young adult audience. Please keep the genre in mind while you read--perhaps then ...more
Emily
Emily rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: life-long readers of Burnett, fans of The Craft, Dead Poet's Society or anything along those lines
Recommended to Emily by: good question
This is what I do when I'm stressed: find something that I would have read as a tween, devour, feel better, shop for more books. It's held me in good stead since, well, I was a tween.

Picture a Victorian finishing school . . . like out of Frances Hodgson Burnett's A Little Princess. Imagine that the school has forbidden areas closed off after a tragedy like in The Secret Garden. (I'm completely blanking on the plot for Little Lord Fauntleroy and never read Burnett's adult fiction, so...more
Kirsty (Blatant Biblioholic)
I picked this up after a friend kept talking about it in a GR group I belong to.

I'm really glad I did pick it up. I was sucked into the book from page 1. The author definitely has a way with words... She painted such a vivid image of the surroundings that I felt as though I was there with the characters in the book.

The plot moves very well, and there were a number of 'cliffhangers' which kept me turning the pages. There was a nice mixture of fantasy and realism, that mad...more
Rollie
Rollie rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Rollie by: Kwesi 章英狮
1895: after seeing her first vision of how her mother dies, Gemma Doyle goes back to Spence to enroll in a proper boarding school in England. Many have changed during the death of her mother, not just her school but also her father… and her frequent having of weird visions.

Gemma in Spence has a hard life at first but with her gladiatorial attitude she stands to turn her enemies to new friends. And as her new friends try to discover more what’s behind the group called The Order and th...more
Jenny
Jenny rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: Everyone, except maybe little kids.
Recommended to Jenny by: Nobody
I love this book. I love the entire series. I found them first in seventh grade, but the third one hadn't come out yet. I was scanning my middle school library's shelves, when I noticed an interesting cover near one of my favorite book series. I read the back and I thought the plot was interesting. So I decided to give it a chance and read it. I thought they were great. I mean, I really didn't consider them as some of my favorite books. Eventually, I went on with my life and sort of forgot abou...more
Maura
This is a young adult book, so I tried really hard to take that into consideration when judging it, but there are so many other, well-done kid/teen books out there that I feel OK about occasionally trashing one.

It basically follows the same overdone storyline we've all seen way too many times: boarding school kids whose parents don't want them discover they have magical powers, and they go through the whole 'magic for good versus magic for evil' struggle. This one didn't work becaus...more
Kaitlyn
Everyone ALWAYS recommends this book, so I just had to read it. I am so glad I did! It was very different from alot of the books I read. Libba Bray definitely captured the Victorian era just perfectly in my opinion. She made the main character Gemma very relatable, and just took you on a fantastic journey. I loved all of the characters, and the plot was awesome! I also loved the parts in the Realms because she made it seem so beautiful. I absolutely love this book and will be saving it in my to ...more
Joyzi

Shall I tell you a story?
A new and terrible one?
A ghost story?
Are you ready?
Shall I begin?

Once upon a time there were four girls.

MP - Suzumiya Haruhi no Yuutsu Pictures, Images and Photos
One was pretty.

MP - Suzumiya Haruhi no Yuutsu Pictures, Images and Photos
One was clever.

WTF Pictures, Images and Photos
One charming, and one…

Haruhi and geass Pictures, Images and Photos
One was mysterious.

But they were all damaged, you see.
Something not right about the lot of them.
Bad blood.
Big dreams.
Oh, I left that part out.
Sorry, that
...more
Kristi (The Story Siren)
Gemma isn’t your typical sixteen year old. Most girls her age have been brought up in London’s society of gossip and lavish balls, but not Gemma. She has had a most unconventional upbringing in India. Yet she yearns to be in London, and the topic is often the start of arguments between her and her mother.

Gemma’s wish becomes a reality when she has a vision of her mother’s death which comes true, and she is sent back to London and enrolled at Spence, an academy for girls. Gemma is unc...more
Lisa
Lisa rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: Girl Power People
Recommended to Lisa by: Emma
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Leanna
Libba Bray’s A Great and Terrible Beauty is a young-adult-novel-slash-Victorian-romance-slash-magical-fantasy; it wants to be many things, but I’m not convinced it succeeds in any.

Great and Terrible is the first in Bray’s Gemma Doyle trilogy. Gemma discovers she has magical powers on her sixteenth birthday. Tragedy strikes, though, and she finds herself shipped off to a finishing school. Defying all logic, Gemma does everything she can to ingratiate herself with the school’s “mean gi...more
Shannon
Gemma Doyle has lived with her British parents in Bombay all her life. Every plea to go to London has been ignored, dismissed and rejected, even though here brother Tom has been there for 4 years now. On the day of her 16th birthday in 1895 Gemma's mother is killed. Or - and this is the truth she keeps to herself, for how can she explain what she saw in a vision? - her mother killed herself to prevent being devoured by a monster of shadow and death.

Gemma finally gets her wish to go t...more
Nikki
I got most of the way through this, and then found that I just didn't care. I didn't care about the characters, the plot moved in fits and starts, the romance/tension/whatever it was supposed to be, with Kartik, just felt pasted on... In conclusion, I basically ran out of give-a-damn.

The writing is competent, in that it's all easy enough to read and understand, but given that the main character's voice wasn't convincing, even though she's the narrator, and the pacing felt jerky, the ...more
Lowed
Lowed rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: YA fans
Shelves: books-read-2011
Terrible beginning, Great Ending. It made me think of Patricia Mckillip's Solstice Wood.

That seemed like a very short review. Anyway, I guess that was just an answer to a previously-read-review. And it's true, the writing isn't that appealing, the characters are a hateful bunch of girls. Okay, I exagerate, they're not really hateful. Well, maybe a bit.! Ü

But all you have to do is you've got to stick with it. It gets better halfway.!
Kelly Leigh
So, I plucked this novel from one of the shelves in the adult fiction section of my local library. Adult fiction? Not the young adult section? Even though the main character is around 16? Curiouser and curiouser. Of late, I have shied away from YA fiction for a myriad of reasons: recycled story lines with epically boring plots told from the POV of whiny ass, weak submissive girls masquerading as strong heroines. Was Mrs. Bray’s A Great and Terrible Beauty shelved within the adult section becau...more
Khaya
Khaya rated it 2 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Khaya by: goodreads
It's telling when most of the popular goodreads reviews of this book, positive as well as negative, contain some sort of disclaimer about needing to cut this book slack because it's a YA book. But is a juvenile audience a legitimate excuse for juvenile writing?

The story is this: It's 1895, and 16-year-old Gemma Doyle's mother has just died a tragic and mysterious death in India. Gemma, as a result, is shipped off to an England boarding school where rich young ladies (and one schol...more
Beth F.
I’ve had bad luck with highly touted YA lately (barfs on Twilight) but was unable to resist this one, probably on account of the cover because corsets and old-fashioned undies fascinate me (even my wedding dress had a corset back). And after the first chapter, I wanted to strangle the main character, Gemma, for being the worst kind of whiny, teenage bitch out there, so I kept thinking, "Oh God, here we go again." I was ready to chalk this one up as another disappointment but then thi...more
Tera
Tera rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: Fans of fantasy/victorian. Might annoy history buffs.
First off, I have to say I don't think this necessarily belongs in the juvenile fiction category. It hovers in some nebulous region between juvie-fic and regular fiction. There were plenty of times when I shook my head wondering if some parent somewhere had just blythly given this to their kid because it was in the "safe category". Also, the cover art kinda turned me off to reading this at first.

Anyway, the story follows Gemma Doyle on her journey from being a sheltered...more
Kerri
I wasn’t so sure about this book when I heard about it, but it changed my mind pretty quickly. There is a supernatural tone to it, as well as an old-fashioned tone. The main character is being forced to be an obedient young lady of the 1800’s, but she acts and sounds more like a typical teenager of today. I love her rebellious side! And the mystery that she has to solve is really interesting too! By the way, there are two more in the series. This is just the first one.

Summary:M...more
Starr
OK, so at first this was a really slow read, but it's the ending that lingers, making you think. Whether you make the physical decision or not, you are making a choice. We see that with Gemma, who must make major decisions about not only her life, but the life of her friends. And the biggest decision of all - will she accept who she is and forgive her mother, a woman she really didn't know at all?

As mentioned in previous reviews, this book takes place in victorian era London, when gi...more
Kristy
I don't read much gothic literature, but this one is gold. It's set in the Victorian age and most of it takes place in England, but it starts off in India (when the Brits were still running things there). Gemma is a sixteen-year-old British girl living in India with her parents. When tragedy strikes and her mother dies, she's shipped off to England to a boarding school with explicit instructions to tell anyone who asks that her mother died of cholera. HINT: She didn't. :o

Gemma ...more
Sunny Rae
Sunny Rae rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: femmenists, women, fantasy types
This book is absolutely amazing.
I am definatley in love... haha
Okay so this book is set in the victoran times,in london, where women were to be looked at, and they were like trophies. They were for appearences and breeding purposes in ways, lol.Which if you know me at all, i am outragiously against this. Like i think maybe femenist is the word. just not man bashing. lmao, anywho, a girl named Gemma, 17, lives in India with her mother. Until Her mother is murdered, and she sees it in ...more
Bex
Bex rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: ANYONE!
Shelves: faves, genre
I will never be able to properly express my absolute love and devotion to this book, and to Libba Bray. The third installment will be out in December, and I plan to read this one again (for the third time!) and I will give it a proper review then, along with the second one, Rebel Angels. Just let it be known that this is probably my most favorite book ever of all time in the history of literature! (and I've read classics like Fitzgerald, Plath and Bronte all who are among my favorites) Libba is ...more
Mo-Mo
A Great and Terrible Beauty by Libba Bray is a story of a young woman named Gemma who is sent to Spence, a school for young ladies in London, after her mother dies. At Spence, she discovers a mystery covered up by the esteemed headmistress of a fire, a teacher's death, and two girls who delved into something far more dangerous than they can handle. As Gemma works to unravel the truth, she discovers her own ability, and the Rakashana, who will do anything to keep her from uncovering the horrifyin...more
Alyssa
A Great and Terrible Beauty has been one of my favorite books since the first time I read it. It is the story of Gemma Doyle, a girl living in India in the Victorian age who is sent off to boarding school in London after her mother dies. She soon discovers that her mother was and important part of a secret Order, who have access to a hidden world. Gemma has inhereted her mother's secret powers and embarks on a journey to learn as much as she can about the Order, and to come to terms with the los...more
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Any books similar to A Great and Terrible Beauty? 6 30 Feb 03, 2012 05:48pm  
Is this book worth finishing? 32 196 Jan 30, 2012 08:02am  
who loves (and hates) this book? 21 51 Jan 19, 2012 07:21am  
Any Suggestions? 7 45 Jan 15, 2012 08:05am  
Greatest book ever! 10 77 Jan 11, 2012 04:58pm  
Book Giveaways: Giveaway: A Great and Terrible Beauty 1 9 Dec 08, 2011 07:59pm  
A Great and Terrible Beauty (Gemma Doyle, #1)
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A Great and Terrible Beauty (Gemma Doyle, #1)

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I think what gets me feeling itchy is all that emphasis on the facts of a life, while all the juicy, relevant, human oddity stuff gets...more
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“Shall I tell you a story? A new and terrible one? A ghost story? Are you ready? Shall I begin? Once upon a time there were four girls. One was pretty. One was clever. One charming, and one...one was mysterious. But they were all damaged, you see. Something not right about the lot of them. Bad blood. Big dreams. Oh, I left that part out. Sorry, that should have come before. They were all dreamers, these girls. One by one, night after night, the girls came together. And they sinned. Do you know what that sin was? No one? Pippa? Ann? Their sin was that they believed. Believed they could be different. Special. They believed they could change what they were--damaged, unloved. Cast-off things. They would be alive, adored, needed. Necessary. But it wasn't true. This is a ghost story remember? A tragedy. They were misled. Betrayed by their own stupid hopes. Things couldn't be different for them, because they weren't special after all. So life took them, led them, and they went along, you see? They faded before their own eyes, till they were nothing more than living ghosts, haunting each other with what could be. With what can't be. There, now. Isn't that the scariest story you've ever heard?” 378 people liked it
“There are no safe choices. Only other choices.” 317 people liked it
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