Review by Booklist Review
Pedro has always been different. Abandoned by his parents in mid-sixteenth century Tenerife, he is raised by a woman who surrounds him with kindness and love, even when others treat him poorly because of the soft hair that covers his body. Pedro is a trusting child--and easy prey for pirates. Transported far from home, he survives a terrifying journey to the court of France's King Henry and his wife, Catherine de Medici. There, Pedro, renamed Petrus, is treated with kindness and educated in courtly manners. Queen Catherine elevates Petrus, marrying him to Catherine, the daughter of a merchant who has lost his fortune. This arranged marriage is difficult for both Petrus and Catherine, but with time, they develop an understanding that turns into a love that sustains them. Greeley (The Heiress, 2021) explores the origins of the "Beauty and the Beast" story in this richly detailed and imaginative novel featuring characters who find solace in each other as they navigate the intrigues of the French court. Readers who enjoy Sandra Gulland and Karleen Koen will relish Greeley's emotionally potent tale.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Greeley (The Heiress) draws on a 16th-century episode that inspired "Beauty and the Beast" in her moving if overwrought latest. In Tenerife, a hairy baby boy is found abandoned at a church and taken in by a woman who has seen most of her family killed or captured by the Spanish conquerors. Given the name Pedro, he's subjected to other children's taunts and known as La Bestia. Later, he's abducted by pirates, sold at the market, and finally, at roughly 10 years old in 1547, taken to Blois. At the French court, Pedro studies French, Latin, Greek, and Italian, and his scholarship astonishes the courtiers and makes King Henri proud, thus securing Pedro a place at the court. Pedro's marriage in 1570 to Catherine, 17, is rocky at first, as she's forced into the union to clear her merchant father's debt and turned off by Pedro's appearance. Greeley nicely develops the gradual bond between Catherine and Pedro, which blossoms into unconditional love, though the story tends to drag and the writing is prosaic (faced with news described as wind that "whips like a storm," a character cannot "stopper his ears against it, cannot deny its stormy force"). Readers who enjoy retold fairy tales may want to take a look. Agent: Jennifer Weltz, Jean V. Naggar Literary. (Feb.)
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