Marvelous – A Novel of Wonder and Romance in the French Royal Court
Polished prose. Some lovely, haunting passages. Third person present tense did not work well for story or setting.
Poorly differentiated character voices. Colorless secondary characters. Not a lot of plot.
Felt dialed in and under-researched. Aspects of style and setting were incongruous.
Winning concept. Hit and miss execution.
Professionally line/copy edited. Needed better substantive editing.
Book Description
A mesmerizing novel set in the French royal court of Catherine de’ Medici during the Renaissance, which recreates the touching and surprising true story behind the Beauty and the Beast legend, from the acclaimed author of The Clergyman’s Wife and The Heiress.
1547: Pedro Gonzales, a young boy living on the island of Tenerife, understands that he is different from the other children in his village. He is mercilessly ridiculed for the hair covering his body from head to toe. When he is kidnapped off the beach near his home, he finds himself delivered by a slave broker into the dangerous and glamorous world of France’s royal court. There “Monsieur Sauvage,” as he is known, learns French, literature, and sword fighting, becoming an attendant to the French King Henri II and a particular favorite of his queen, the formidable Catherine de’ Medici. Queen Catherine considers herself a collector of unusual people and is fascinated by Pedro…and determined to find him a bride.
Catherine Raffelin is a beautiful seventeen-year-old girl whose merchant father has fallen on hard times and offers up his daughter to Queen Catherine. The queen will pay his debts, and his daughter will marry Monsieur Sauvage…
Pam’s Take
Marvelous is a novel that comes with a built-in audience. Who can resist the prospect of a Beauty and the Beast retelling based on the real life “beast” who inspired the fairytale. I grabbed the book before anyone in our team could claim dibs. If ever a story deserved a gorgeous retelling, it’s the stranger-then-fiction life of Pedro González, a man afflicted by hypertrichosis , who was ‘collected’ as a human oddity by Catherine de Medici, and who married a woman of her court.
I was only a few chapters in when I began to wonder if author Molly Greeley felt the weight of expectation so keenly she over-compensated, serving up four hundred pages of prose that was sometimes inspired, lush, and powerful, but in equal measure distant and so over-worked, it sometimes felt like a writing school assignment.
I’ve never been a fan of third person present tense, even when handled masterfully by the likes of Hilary Mantel. It seemed an odd choice for Marvelous, but maybe that’s just a matter of personal taste. Likewise, contrived nods to present-day preoccupations are a distraction in historical novels. The gay kiss between Pedro and the Duke of Nevers, supposed childhood friends, was a cringeworthy example in Marvelous. As far as I know, authors don’t (yet) have to score ESG points, so Ms. Greeley could have done herself, and her readers, a favor by dumping that pointless scene.
It was not the only wrong-footed choice in her novel. The story was told in an episodic manner, spun together in a highlights reel of sorts, which was made even more disjointed by viewpoint switches that did not feel organic and certainly didn’t help deepen character. When a novel is character-driven, as this one was, it’s a problem if no one seems to be at the wheel.
Authors work hard to realize their vision. Experiencing their story through the lens they provide can be a delightful, unexpected experience. So, I stuck it out and finished Marvelous, hoping for a pay-off. In the end, the story drifted to a conclusion I’ll generously call bittersweet. If I’m honest, I felt let down.
When I started on this review I wanted to put my finger on what was missing in this potentially great story. Obviously, Ms. Greeley worked hard – no one can pull 400 pages out of thin air. In-depth research would have enriched her story and enabled her to flesh out her characters and period in greater depth. Pedro and his wife Catherine’s life story was inherently tragic and touching. Ultimately, it needed to be told with at least as much passion as Ms. Greeley spent on polishing her prose.
Marvelous was reviewed in ARC format through Netgalley. Cover image courtesy of William Morrow © 2023. Review by Pat Baker © 2023 The Regency Chronicle.
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Book Details
- Marvelous: A Novel, by Molly Greeley
- William Morrow. February 28, 2023
- Hardcover, eBook, & audiobook. 414 pages
- ISBN: 978-0063244092
- Genre: Historical Fiction, Historical Romance, Gothic Fiction