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Book Reviews of The Essex Serpent: A Novel

The Essex Serpent: A Novel
The Essex Serpent A Novel
Author: Sarah Perry
ISBN-13: 9780062666376
ISBN-10: 0062666371
Publication Date: 6/6/2017
Pages: 432
Rating:
  • Currently 3.3/5 Stars.
 4

3.3 stars, based on 4 ratings
Publisher: Custom House
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

2 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

esjro avatar reviewed The Essex Serpent: A Novel on + 956 more book reviews
Historical fiction (especially set in Victorian times) is admittedly not my thing: I find it boring. The Essex Serpent received a fair amount of critical acclaim and positive reviews, so I figured I'd stretch myself a bit by reading this door stopper.

This did nothing to increase my interest in the genre. It was really boring. People take walks, write letters, lie around in bed being sick, and yearn for each other.

The prose was eloquent and did a good job of conveying the atmosphere (e.g. boring and it gets dark quite early), hence the 2 stars.
maura853 avatar reviewed The Essex Serpent: A Novel on + 542 more book reviews
I enjoyed this, but felt that the narrative pay-off didn't live up to the expectations that Perry had created.

I loved the main character -- a young woman who had endured an abusive marriage (in the way that Victorian women just had to endure, with no other choices available to them), who is freed by the unexpected death of her husband. Her joy -- and slight hesitancy -- and her new-found freedom (and wealth) is a delight: she (and the reader) can hardly believe her luck. That the Evil Husband didn't break her, didn't kill her, didn't get the chance to write her out of his will, and leave her destitute, as a final cruelty from beyond the grave (any one of those things, and worse, he might have done) is amazing, and she almost finds it hard to credit her luck. The Evil Husband is such a malign presence that I kept waiting for his death to be a trick, for him to appear at her door, thoroughly alive or perhaps undead, demanding to reclaim her, his fortune, and their child.

Because it could have been that kind of novel, and almost is one in which the magical is lurking just on the margins, and anything might happen. I wish Perry had gone with that a bit more -- nailed her colors to the mast, and leaned a little bit more in toward the magical, instead of carefully adjusting her ideas, and bringing it all back around to the sensible and"literary." No sea monsters to see here, everyone! Just move on ....