Oh fun! I think that was the best one they’ve done since Lady Jane! Just a joy and a half from start to finish.
~*~
Better review, probably: I like pirates. Well, no, I like the pop culture of pirates. I dig my Pirates of the Caribbean, my Monkey Island, my Assassin's Creed Black Flag. The lighthearted stuff. I know a smidge of the real life history, not a ton, but I love the silly pop culture stuff. And this book has it in spades and spades.
The Janeies and Mary series have always been about Disney and Princess Bride jokes, and this one is no exception. I was absolutely groaning out loud, and then laughing out loud--on some pages there's a joke every other sentence. Maybe it's because I'm decently familiar with the subject matter, but most of the jokes landed just perfectly. I'm sure a lot more went over my head, but I got most of them, I feel, and I laughed out loud multiple times. An intense rarity. At one point there's an extended I'll Just Have To Find Myself a New Giant joke that just had me in stitches, I had to put the book down.
But it's not all about the jokes. I also desperately loved the setting, the freedom of a ship, the exploration and quest for gold. The National Treasure style booby traps, the drama of a prison escape, even just how fight scenes are written in this bombastic movie style.
No, I'm not going to say the characters are deep. The villains are as thin as tissue paper, and the stakes not as high as they want to pretend they are. And yet, I find there to be depth there. Mary is perhaps a little too perfect, but that one scene of her comforting Jack at the end really hit. The strength she had to push forward when she was so frightened really got me. And resisting who her family made her out to be, being called Littlest as a mermaid and yet fighting to find her place. Little glimmers within the jokes.
Every story is written for a reason. Every story has some value and meaning. This one makes you laugh, and makes you yearn for adventure and friends, and helps you know you're more than just what others perceive you to be.
Mary doesn't let Vane reveal she's a woman. She takes charge of the moment and reveals herself. I love that.
(It does have a You Lied To Me line, though, I should knock a star for that, I can't bear those. Even if he sort of didn't, she just sort of didn't really ask.)
The Mary series and the Jane series in general are a hard sell for me. Normally I find them perfectly average books. Lighthearted and fun, but often I want something More from them, and I get impatient in the twee whatever. I didn't care much for the Mary Shelley one, nor Calamity Jane, or even Contrary Mary. I don't remember what happened in Jane Eyre. But maybe it's my book slump right now and my distaste for everything, but this hit Just right, broke through the sludge and the slime of a slump, and made me feel warm and happy about reading again. For that alone, a full five stars.
It feels exactly like when I read My Lady Jane for the first time. The surprise and the joy and the eagerness to see what zany joke they'd make next, what fun surprise was around the corner.