I am sad that I didn't enjoy this book as much as I thought I would. The premise was what made me pick it up in the first place (besides the cover) the struggle between man vs beast living in two different worlds plagued by different problems, except one common issue, the other exists. While this caught my attention, the rest of the story however flopped. So here's a couple of reasons why this book wasn't for me :
Characters: In the novel as I mentioned above we follow two characters the Old Woman and Joe. The book focuses more so on the cougar's side of things than Joe's. I was surprised by this since for most Man vs Beast stories the humans tend to get more attention leaving the animals' lives secret making them seem more like monsters. While I do love this, I think we should've had an equal chance to invest in Joe, for he barely fits the criteria of a monster, if that's what she was going for. He definitely got the short end of the stick on this one. His chapters are very short, and to me his motivations to decide that he wants to hunt her down was weird. He decides this as a young boy when there wasn't any historical accounts of repeated cougar attacks on the town. They just feared her for the sake of being scared. I found his character to be inconsistent as well, his obsession with the Old Woman waxed and waned like the friggin' moon. The author at one point calls it "madness", but he goes in search of her twice throughout the novel and this is prompted by two incidences ( sheep killing and a young girl who was scratched by another cougar and was fine). He listens to the towns' myths about her though he barely wanders the woods looking for the infamous "Old Woman" himself. His "obsession" was only brought out by the townsfolk more so than her living "rent-free" in his mind. It seemed more of a plot convenience than anything else for the final showdown. The cougar's point of view was very nature documentary-esque, which I was okay with.
Repetitions: One of the reasons this book took me so long to finish was how repetitious it got. Every other word in the Old Woman's pov was "the Cougar", while she had a name, and we knew from the start that this cougar that the novel follows in her day to day life is the Old Woman, she was only called "the cougar". The other cougars get names like "Transient" and "Harbinger", but our main character is just "the Cougar". This drove me insane. This book could've been a lot shorter too. Some of the chapters is just the characters doing the same thing as they were doing in the last chapter. The cougar hunts, finds a weird smell of another cougar in the area, stalks it, fights it, mates with it, or kills it, and then has babies this also happens in the next chapter as well. While ,like I mentioned above, I don't mind the nature documentary thing, but she barely interacts with the humans and I was wondering how this fits in with the myths that "plague" the town if she never meets them. This also happens in Joe's point of view as well, especially towards the end of the book, where we follow him on a painful step by step shopping trip to grab peanut butter as he reminisces how things have changed in his not-so-little town.
Supernatural Stuff: When first diving into this book there wasn't any mention of a spiritual world, either in nature or with the townsfolk. It was a straightforward novel that seemed to be grounded hard into reality. So later when death is mentioned it has a capital D, then a crimson red cougar shows up, seemingly to be the big cat's version of the Grim reaper and when Joe fights the Old Woman in the spirit world, I was surprised. The tone of the novel shifted pretty drastically, and while I don't mind magical realism, I feel it needs to be hinted at early on.
The Writing: I did enjoy the writing for the most part, some things were wonderfully written and very thorough. Too thorough at times. On the other hand the author would leave you hanging and then jump into the next section without warning which I found incredibly distracting.
I had originally given this book 3 stars, but as I was writing this review I felt two stars were more appropriate to what I actually feel about this novel. I know this is the author's debut novel, so I hope I wasn't too harsh, but this was just a complete miss for me. If she writes anymore novels on the lives of animals I think I would be curious enough to give her another shot.