Beginnings: Beauty and the Beast edition

Okay, you remember I recently got samples of a whole lot of Beauty and the Beast retellings, right? Well, I thought it would be interesting to just glance at the opening lines of all of them, one after the other, and see if any stand out. Turns out there are thirteen stories here. Let’s take a look:


1. The Eye of the Beholder (Nicole Ciacchella)


My earliest remembrance was that of issuing my first order. I was a lad of perhaps four, and I had tossed my ball across the courtyard, and decided that I did not wish to pursue it. I turned, looked at my nursemaid, and decided that I wished for her to get it so that I would not have to be troubled. Of course, this meant that my nursemaid was to be troubled, but that did not matter to me. What child of four ever worries about the troubles of others.


“Pick it up,” I told her, frowning and pointing at the ball.


Without a moment’s hesitation, she did as she was told.


What do you think? I’m all Eh, well, maybe. What a little snot this child is going to be, obviously. I wonder how long it will be until he gets cursed and gets over himself? There’s only so much ultra-brattiness I want to put up with, so hopefully it’ll happen soon.


2. The Merchant’s Daughter (Melanie Dickerson)


Annabel sat in the kitchen shelling peas into a kettle at her feet. A bead of sweat tickled her hairline while only the barest puff of warm air came through the open door.


“Annabel!” her brother called from the main house.


As she hurried to finish shelling the pea pod in her hand and see what Edward wanted, the pot of the fire began to boil over. She jumped up, banging her shin on the iron kettle on the floor.


A more realistic setting, a more familiar type of protagonist — actually rather Cinderella-ish. Hard to judge from this little tidbit.


3. Belle (Cameron Dokey)


I’ve heard it said – and my guess is you have too – that beauty is in the eye of the beholder. But I’ve never been certain it’s true.


Think about it for a moment.


It sounds nice. I’ll give you that. A way for every face to be beautiful, if only you wait for the right pair of eyes. If only you wait long enough. I’ll even grant you that beauty isn’t universal. A girl who is considered drop-dead gorgeous in a town by the sea may find herself completely overlooked in a village the next county over.


Even so, “beauty is in the eye of the beholder” doesn’t quite work, does it?


Not sure about this. Maybe yes, maybe no. Not super-keen on being lectured to by the protagonist right off the bat, and I feel like she’s going to possibly be all angsty and sorry for herself because she’s not pretty enough. I’d turn the page, though, and see where this is going.


4. The Shadow of the Bear (Regina Doman)


The two girls were alone in their house that night.


Inside was safe enough – the living room crammed full of the books and comfortable worn chair from their old country home. But right beyond the window was New York City, vast and dirty and dangerous. And a howling January snowstorm was wreaking its fury upon it.


A contemporary setting! Hmm. What is the enchanted castle going to be if this is set in New York? Or is this story going to go off in its own direction and not really stick too closely to the original?


5. Entreat Me (Grace Draven)


From the highest window in the keep, Ballard looked out upon the forests and fields of his family’s demesne and waited for his wife to die. A westerly breeze blew in the green scent of clover, along with the peppery musk of pine and ask that heralded the coming spring and the summer soon to follow. Summer had been Isabeau’s favorite season, but she wouldn’t live long enough to see this one or the bloom of her beloved roses.


The title is kind of a turn-of for me. But I really like the pathos of this beginning. I don’t see anything of Beauty and the Beast in it yet, but I like it.


6. Masque (WR Gingell)


Ambassadors’ Grand Parties are usually huge, glittering, boring affairs at best. One daren’t do anything untoward (comment upon how fat a grandee of state is getting, for example, even—especially—if he is). Despite this tacit prohibition, the hosting ambassador usually spends the evening in a red, sweaty lather, madly running here and there in a desperate bid to be sure that all his distinguished guests are comfortable and sufficiently flattered. Ambassadors’ wives, on the other hand, tend to watch the proceedings with an amused eye, and pat their husbands affectionately upon the head every time a harried dash brings them sufficiently close to do so.


Maybe? There’s a little bit of a snide tone here — how awful those grandees are, letting themselves go like that, and those poor silly ambassadors. Not sure I am all that sympathetic to the narrator.


7. Depravity (MJ Haag)


I wrapped my hands around the cold bars of the massive, black iron gate and glared after the smith’s sons, Tennen and Splane Coalre. The pair cast nervous glances back at me as they scurried away from the beast’s shadowy garden. They had locked me inside because of misdirected spite. It wasn’t my fault I’d seen what I had.


“This is what you get, Benella,” Tennen had said as he had pushed me into the beast’s lair.


Tennen thought his treatment just. However, the current situation was anything but just.


Horrible title. But a promising beginning. The writing doesn’t seem all that wonderful, but I do like the situation.


8. Of Beast and Beauty (Stacy Jay)


In the beginning was the darkness, and in the darkness was a girl, and in the girl was a secret. The secret was as old as the cracked cobblestone streets of Yuan, as peculiar as the roses that bloom eternally within the domed city’s walls, as poisonous as forgotten history and the stories told in its place.


By the time the girl was born, the secret was all but lost. The stories had become scripture, and only the very brave – or very mad – dared to doubt them. The girl was raised on the stories, and never questioned their truth, until the day her mother took her walking beyond the city walls.


Oh, really nice writing here. I like this a lot. This is the first one where I find it hard *not* to go on with the story right now.


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9. The Fire Rose (Mercedes Lackey)


Golden as sunlight, white-hot, the Salamander danced and twisted sinuously above a plat sculpted of Mexican obsidian, ebony glass born in the heart of a volcano and shaped into a form created exactly to receive the magic of a creature who bathed in the fires of the volcano with delight. It swayed and postured to a music only it could hear, the only source of light in the otherwise stygian darkness of the rom. At times a manikin of light, at times in the shape of the mundane salamander that bore the same name, this was the eyes and ears of the mage who had conjured it.


Intriguing.


10. A Court of Thorns and Roses (Sarah Maas)


The forest had become a labyrinth of snow and ice.


I’d been monitoring the parameters of the thicket for an hour, and my vantage point in the crook of a tree branch had turned useless. The gusting wind blew thick flurries to sweep away my tracks, but buried along with them any signs of potential quarry.


Hunger had brought me farther from home than I usually risked, but winter was the hard time The animals had pulled in, going deeper into the woods than I could follow, leaving me to pick off stragglers one by one, praying they’d last until spring.


They hadn’t.


I don’t find the writing all that strong here. Where and when are we? “Monitoring” and “parameters” are such modern words; is this supposed to be a modern setting? And is “parameters” exactly the right word? Could the narrator mean “perimeter?” Though that wouldn’t be plural; a thicket only has one perimeter.


Also, what animals? Wouldn’t this be stronger and more visual if the author mentioned bears that have disappeared into dens, deer that have tucked themselves away in thick woods where the firs break the force of the wind, etc? *Would* there be “stragglers”? I mean, it’s not like a couple of bears or whatever might not have noticed that it’s the middle of winter. They all hibernate at about the same time.


So, offhand, not super keen on going on with this one.


11. Roses (GR Mannering)


She panted into the chilled air. Snowflakes fluttered around her like ashen butterflies, clinging to her lashes and to the hood of her thick cloak. Champ, her warhorse, tore through the night’s darkness with clouds of warm breath, and his flanks heaved after the rush of the ride.


Before them in the enchanted quiet stood a castle. It was just as it had been described to her, and she grimaced slightly, for she had hoped that it was not real. The snowflakes whirled around its façade without settling, brushing against the latticed windows and marble arches. It was vast and rich with numerous turrets of coppery brick that appeared to rise higher and higher until they were lost in the white of the snowstorm. Its outline flickered against the magenta sky and shifted under her gaze as if it almost were not there.


“Champ”? Oh, please. At least when Beauty named her horse Greatheart, she was like eight years old.


On the other hand, I like the idea of this girl hoping the castle wasn’t real and that she wouldn’t find it. I don’t think I’d have balked at the magenta sky if I hadn’t just read the beginning of #10, which primed me to be picky and irritable. Besides, maybe the sky really is magenta, though that seems a little unlikely.


12. Heart’s Blood (Juliet Marillier)


At a place where two tracks met, the carter brought his horse to a sudden stop.


“This is where you get down,” he said.


Dusk was falling, and mist was closing in over a landscape curiously devoid of features. Apart from low clumps of grass, all I could see nearby was an ancient marker stone whose inscription was obscured by a coat of creeping mosses. Every part of me ached with weariness. “This is not even a settlement!” I protested. “It’s – it’s nowhere!”


“This is as far west as your money takes you,” the man said flatly. “Wasn’t that the agreement? It’s late. I won’t linger in these parts after nightfall.”


Poor kid! Sure, I’d go on with this.


13. Beast (Donna Jo Napoli)


The lion-ape lunges from the tree a moment too late; Bahram Chubina’s arrow has already sealed its fate.


I gasp roughly. Beast and warrior glow white, burning, against the gold ground. The sun glints off the illuminated pages as it glints off the metal mar – snake – that twists around and around from my wrist to my elbow. My fists clench; I am aghast at dying, aghast at killing.


“Orasmyn?”


I turn, startled.


Mother comes in, her face unveiled – she has not yet left the palace this morning. The pleasure of seeing the dark silver moons under her eyes, her full cheeks, pulls me at once from the violence on the page to the sweet calm of our lives.


What a sensitive flower, so aghast at killing and dying that he can’t handle an adventure story. I am rolling my eyes at this twit already and it hasn’t even been a full page.


Okay, so! The CLEAR, OBVIOUS winner here is #8, Stacy Jay’s Of Beast and Beauty. Yes? Anybody disagree?


After that, I would be most inclined to go on with #5, #7, or #12. I grant you, I’m biased toward #12 because I already think Marillier is a great writer.


For me, just based on these little tidbits, #10 — A Court of Thorns and Roses — is at the bottom. Popular sucker, though. 11,000 reviews on Goodreads, overall rating over 4.0. Well, I’m not persuaded it’d work for me. Have any of you read it? What did you think?


And I must say that #13 is just about tied for the bottom spot. The narrator just seems so precious. If anybody has read Napoli’s Beast, Yes/No for Orasmyn being a bit of a twit?


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Published on April 08, 2016 07:34
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message 1: by Chachic (new)

Chachic I've read Belle, Entreat Me, The Fire Rose, Heart's Blood and Beast. Sadly, none of them stood out for me. I think I've forgotten most of the stories. It's hard for me to find a Beauty and the Beast retelling to love.


message 2: by Rachel (new)

Rachel Neumeier Too bad! Have you read Bryony and Roses? That's definitely a good one.


message 3: by Chachic (new)

Chachic Yep, I read it recently, based on your recommendation. I enjoyed it but it didn't stand out for me.


message 4: by SarahBeth (new)

SarahBeth I've read Hearts Blood which I enjoyed and Fire Rose which had a well done story going until the 'I've reached my word limit so I'm done writing, abrupt, throw the book at the wall ending'. I did appreciate Lackey's handling of the Beast's curse. I loved Beauty by Robin McKinley but not Rose Daughter. I have added the Stacey Jay book to my TBR list. My sister just read and enjoyed Bryony and Roses and has given me back my copy so I can read it now.


message 5: by Rachel (new)

Rachel Neumeier Chachic, too bad! Maybe I found it extra seductive because I garden, too.

Sarah Beth, argh, I agree endings are hard, but it is annoying to read a book where it seems like the author just threw a period in at random and declared she was done -- though I'm sure no one ever *really* does that, there are times it sure seems that way.


message 6: by Liz H (new)

Liz H {Redd's Reads} I just finished reading A Court of Thorns and Rose last month. I had some trouble with the beginning being a bit slow on both worldbuilding and plot, but after only a few chapters, this story really picked up and did interesting things with both the original Beauty and the Beast story (where the girl messes up and has to go do the saving) and the crueler version of faeries. I now anxiously await the sequel.


message 7: by Stephanie (new)

Stephanie I loooove the Regina Doman opening! (I just downloaded the Kindle sample based on that opening, so thank you for sharing it!) It's not a Beauty and the Beast retelling at all, though, is it? It looks like it's a Snow White & Rose Red retelling. (But I'm so glad you shared it anyway!)

And I can testify to the fact that the Juliet Marillier novel is really fun. I enjoyed it a lot!


message 8: by Rachel (new)

Rachel Neumeier Stephanie, yes, someone else also pegged the Doman as Snow White and Rose Red -- hmpf. I was TRYING to just select B & the B retellings. But I liked the beginning as well, so I will probably try that one first so I can read it and move it to the appropriate folder on my Kindle.

Liz, obviously lots of people really like ACoTaR, so maybe when I try the full sample, I'll find I get into it, too.


message 9: by Larry (new)

Larry Truett I agree with your questioning the usage of the word parameters in the second sentence of A Court of Thorns and Roses. The word perimeter should have probably been used instead of parameters.

"I’d been monitoring the parameters of the thicket for an hour, and my vantage point in the crook of a tree branch had turned useless."


message 10: by Rachel (new)

Rachel Neumeier I'm surprised the copy editor didn't question this. If she did, I'm surprised the author didn't change it. Either way, I have to admit this word use turned me off enough that I've never tried to read further in the book.


message 11: by Heidi (new)

Heidi I've been having a very Beauty and the Beast year for some reason! It was always my favorite. I loved Rose Daughter, The Princess Curse, and Hunted, though none are on this list. Recently picked up Kate Forsyth's The Beast's Garden (I liked Bitter Greens), and got both Of Beast and Beauty and Beast through this summer's AudioSync...will listen to confirm twitness. :P


message 12: by Rachel (new)

Rachel Neumeier Fun year! -- Wait, you HAVE read McKinley's original Beauty, yes? As well as Rose Daughter? Drop everything and read Beauty if you haven't yet!

I have a specific Beauty and the Beast folder on my Kindle. Hunted is in there, but I haven't tried it yet...


message 13: by Heidi (new)

Heidi I know!! I haven't read it and it's criminal! I bought Beauty a couple of years back and it's in storage until we get a house which is killing me.

I was really pleasantly surprised and charmed by Hunted. Cool weaving together of Beauty and the Beast and a Russian folktale whose name currently escapes me.


message 14: by Rachel (new)

Rachel Neumeier IN STORAGE?? That right there might be enough to force me to buy a second copy on kindle. Good luck on the house thing!


message 15: by Heidi (new)

Heidi Thanks! Yeah, the library has it available on Overdrive, I just may have to do it. :P


message 16: by Sherwood (new)

Sherwood Smith 12, definitely intriguing. 8 dulled with all the repeated uses of 'to be.,' a neutral verb.

Definitely a variety of tones!


message 17: by Hallie (new)

Hallie What a fun list!

Number 6 is right out for me, with fat slams in the second sentence, but the Doman sounds interesting, even though not Beauty and the Beast.


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