I read Laura Wood's debut YA, A Sky Painted Gold, earlier in 2019 and fell in love with it. It was my perfect idea of a book: historical fiction, with a romance to die for and a female heroine it was impossible not to fall in love with. Laura Wood even started my love for Eva Ibbotson's books and I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith, which I'll forever be grateful for.
So, it's safe to say, I was a tiny bit excited to read Under a Dancing Star. And by a tiny bit, I mean "I thought about reading it at least five times a day, without fail, every day." It's been my most-anticipated release of 2019, especially as it, too, sounded like my perfect idea of a book: a Much Ado About Nothing re-telling (my favourite Shakespeare play), set during Italy in the 1930's. Amazing.
I read Under a Dancing Star within the space of a few hours because I could not put it down. It was impossible to tear myself away from Wood's mesmerising prose, her witty lines, and incredibly realistic characters. I was torn between wanting to read it all and not wanting it to end, but eventually I settled on practically inhaling it, and will most definitely be revisiting it line for line, word for word, very soon.
Bea, our heroine, is a science-loving, quick-witted, sometimes clumsy protagonist, who does Shakespeare's Beatrice proud. She had my heart from the moment she turned up clutching a jam jar full of glow worms, and I loved being able to explore the different layers to her character: the weight her parents' expectations place on her, her desire to make something of her life. I didn't think it was possible to take Shakespeare's Beatrice and make her even more rounded, but Wood manages to do this with ease, and Beatrice follows in the footsteps of Eva Ibbotson's Ruth Berger (The Morning Gift) and Sarah Perry's Cora Seaborne (The Essex Serpent). All characters I have huge respect (and a slight envy) for.
My favourite aspect of Wood's novels is watching the heroine come into her own and discover who she really is. Even though on the surface, Under a Dancing Star is about the burgeoning romance between Bea and Ben(edick), at its heart is Bea's journey to realising her true self, a journey that I think is so vital for teenager's to see.
The romance, which was just as swoonworthy as Lou and Robert's in A Sky Painted Gold, was out of this world amazing. Keeping the acerbic wit I love most in Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing, it also had a tenderness and sweetness that I wasn't expecting. It's never cliché or forced, but as natural as breathing.
Setting also plays a huge part in Under a Dancing Star: set in Italy, you can feel the heat of the Italian summer sun rising out of each page. I loved reading about the plants and birds and insects that Bea came across; I loved the descriptions of the food and the weather, in contrast to Bea's native England. And, most of all, Wood has a way of describing the sky that is second-to-none. She makes me want to climb atop a roof in Florence and gaze at the stars, something no author has ever achieved before.
I thought it was going to be impossible to beat A Sky Painted Gold, but Laura Wood has achieved the almost impossible: a perfect second novel that compliments the first in total harmony, whilst having a style and charm that is completely its own.
Laura Wood's books make me believe that I can achieve anything, as long as I believe in myself and am prepared for the journey to get there. Pure magic, from first page to last. The best book I'm likely to read in 2019, and maybe just the best YA book I've ever read.