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Beauty Can Be Terrible

By FyreHaar | Posted Under Book Reviews | Comments (14)



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This was McKinley’s second book. It continued her practice of re-telling familiar fairy tales. Her re-tellings are not modernizations nor are they deconstructions. What all of McKinley’s books have in common is that they are very personal stories. Instead of the grand, sweeping narrative she focuses on the experiences of individual characters. She is illustrating a perspective on events rather than the events themselves. While the story is seen from a different angle, none of the mystery or magic is lost, as often happens in re-tellings that become deconstructions.

A Door in the Hedge has both traditional stories and completely new works. The titular story is thematically old - baby princess is fated to be stolen by fairies, is stolen by fairies, meets fairy prince, their intense love breaks spell. The presentation and the resolution of the story are unique. The prose creates a dreamlike world and unlike many traditional stories, the land of fairy is not a perilous realm of false charms but a land contentment. It is not altogether human but sometimes being altogether human is not necessarily the best thing to be.

McKinley’s versions of The Frog Prince and The Golden Hind were especially striking. They both touched on a theme she returns to in her later works; the idea that beauty can be terrible. That a beauty too great and too pure would be a bad thing and that people or objects that seem too perfect are to be mistrusted. The corollary to this is that plain people, in both appearance and character, are the real people in any world. People who have simple and pure motivations are those capable of the most powerful redemptive actions.

A Door in The Hedge is a must for any McKinley fan. It shows a new author beginning to grow into her own and find confidence in her persistent themes and style. If you have yet to read any of her work this would be an excellent introduction.

This review is part of the Cannonball Read series. For more of FyreHaar’s reviews, check out Fire & Sonic.









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Comments

Aww thanks for reviewing a McKinely book. I'd say her writing always stays and grows with you. Hero and the Crown has been my favorite book since I was 11 and on every reread I find something new in it, (cleverly hidden sex scenes heyo!)

She's also much deeper than your average fantasy writing. Even her early books have more depth to them than the Harry Potters of today.

Another trait of her books is a strong sense of normality despite fantastical elements. Her characters are concerned with comfort/discomfort and flavors, and eating and living and breathing and the awkwardness of social gatherings etc. These human concerns always make the world feel relateable, no matter how much fantasy is involved.

Love love love Sunshine too. Sunshine is full of real vampires and food. Those are opposite things.

Posted by: Gigi&ThePonies at August 17, 2010 9:57 PM

I've read several of McKinley's books and loved them. You've just reminded me to go hunting for titles I haven't read yet. Thank you.

Posted by: Jerce at August 17, 2010 10:07 PM

Yeah. Now I want to read Door in the Hedge again.

Posted by: Gigi&ThePonies at August 18, 2010 1:36 AM

I highly recommend Outlaws of Sherwood as well. I'll have to check these out, I sort of forgot she's written other books.

Posted by: Stella at August 18, 2010 8:16 AM

I always liked Deerskin an awful lot, despite the terrifying rape in the beginning. I still can't believe my library put that book in the YA section...

Posted by: Phaeolus at August 18, 2010 10:35 AM

Deerskin. One of my favorite books by McKinley, or anyone else for that matter. I've read and reread that one a few dozen times.

Posted by: dlh at August 18, 2010 10:35 AM

I have no idea what your talking about, but seeing a picture of TV's "Beauty and the Beast" always reminds me of Baby Jessica because NBC cut away from an episode to show her being pulled out of that little well in Texas. Remember how she fell into a little pipe in her backyard and was stuck there for days? That shit was wild!

Posted by: Kballs at August 18, 2010 10:58 AM

Deerskin and Sunshine both rocked my world. McKinley only gets better. Pegasus is coming out this fall!

Posted by: FyreHaar at August 18, 2010 1:41 PM

McKinley generally rocks--The Hero and the Crown, The Blue Sword, Deerskin, Outlaws--all have permanent places on my shelf. On reread, though, I think Sunshine should have ended about a third of the way through. You know the place.

Posted by: Salieri2 at August 18, 2010 6:48 PM

You are completely right Salieri2.

Since we are on it. Her latest was weird....DragonHaven.

First time I felt like one of her characters was annoying, yet I couldn't put it down. I far prefer McKinely when she is writing woman.

And yes, the rape scene in Deerskin is terrifying. Also that book makes me very much want a dog.

Posted by: ThingOfThings at August 19, 2010 2:11 AM

I grew up reading The Hero and the Crown and The Blue Sword and love them. I love how Aerin burns the shit out of herself while trying out the ointment. I didn't really like the weird skull haunting bits, though.

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