The premise of Beautiful Girl peaked my interest and I was really looking forward to the story that it hinted at, a girl learning about inner beauty and gaining personal strength from it, but unfortunately it fell short of the mark for me.
Melanie, the main character and narrator of the story, felt very one dimensional to me and I just couldn’t connect with her. The situation she was in sucked, I can’t deny that, but I just couldn’t find a spark in her that made her all that interesting as a person and didn’t really see too much of a change between the Melanie we meet in the beginning of the story and the one at the end of the story. Sam was likeable enough, but fell into the same category as Melanie. The relationship that forms between Melanie and Sam is, for lack of a better word, sudden and the insta love that comes out of it had me scratching my head. I don’t typically have an issue with insta-love, but in this case it just didn’t work for me and felt forced. The rest of the characters had me feeling much the same way, but the one character that I did find interesting and added some sparks of life to the story was Joe, Sam’s father. He had something of a stereotypical in the story, but I liked what he brought to the table.
The story moves quickly and a lot happens but it felt choppy, like the pieces just didn’t fit right together. There were parts that started and ended abruptly and all I could think was: That’s it? Especially when it came to the moments, which there were quite a few, that were set up to be highly emotional. I’m not one that likes it when things are drawn out for drama’s sake, but there could have been a little more meat to some of the moments to garner more of an emotional punch.
Overall: I really wanted to like Beautiful Girl, and the potential for it be a good story is there, it just unfortunately wasn’t for me.
~ ARC received from SparkPress via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review ~