4.5 stars
And how amazing would it feel, to set this burden down, just for a few moments? To share it with someone else for a bit? How sweet would the relief taste, if he were able to share this shameful, dark secret that had plagued him since he was born?
Of Curses And Kisses was a book that I desperately wanted to read ever since I learnt of its existence in August 2019. There were three main reasons why I wanted to read this book.
A. A Beauty and The Beast retelling with an Indian MC. I’m a sucker for B&B retellings, and as an Indian myself, the very idea of being represented made me way too happy.
B. Interracial romance. I’m a firm believer in the fact that people should be allowed to date whomever they want to, and that skin colour shouldn’t matter — only who you are on the inside should.
C. Addressing colonisation appropriately. My country was colonised for a fairly long time, as any Indian history text book will tell you, and we still feel the repercussions of the plundering which happened then today.
Come Jan 2020, I learnt that it was possible to score an ARC through NetGalley. It was an amazing surprise to be approved by the publisher, and then I had the book in my hands… And it EXCEEDED MY EXPECTATIONS!
This book delivered on all the things it promised. A cute YA romance story, with points A, B, and C discussed above making the foundation. What wasn’t there to love?
Jaya Rao is the Princess of Mysuru, and the heir to the throne. (Though India doesn’t have a feudal system anymore and is a complete democracy, descendants of old royal families still wield a hell lot of respect — the Wadiyars of Mysore, whom I guess inspired Jaya’s ancestors in this story, and the Pataudis, are two such examples.)
Her younger sister has seen some public disgrace recently, and thus their parents think sending them to a boarding school, far away from India, would help the media forget about the scandal and move on to a new news cycle.
But Jaya doesn’t plan to sit quietly and study. She knows the person who leaked the stories to the tabloids is an Emerson, and she plans to take revenge.
Grey Emerson is the heir to a British lordship, and coincidentally attends the school that Jaya joins. Back in the day when India was under the British Raj, the Emersons plundered temples in Mysore and stole a sacred ruby from one such temple. The then Rao matriarch cursed the Emersons in retaliation, and ever since, for generations, the two clans have been dragging the other through the mud.
Jaya’s plan is simple. Make Grey fall in love with her (which shouldn’t be difficult since she’s a stunning beauty), and break his heart as revenge for destroying her sister’s reputation.
Meanwhile, Grey lives in constant fear because all his life, his dad has told him that he’s the target of the Rao curse — that Grey is going to die at 18. Naturally, he’s a bit of a recluse, a misanthrope, and in his own eyes, a beast.
This book is a very loose retelling of Beauty and The Beast. It shares some of the more basic elements, but it’s more of an original story than anything else. It’s mildly fantastical (since the rose petals falling off part, despite being given a makeover, was still exactly that), and I’d say that rather than seeing it as a retelling, we should see it as an homage to the original story.
Both Jaya and Grey take turns narrating the story, and I found that I enjoyed both POVs immensely. Jaya is always obsessed with following the rules and keeping up with her duties as a princess — in another life, she’d have made a fantastic ruler for her people. Grey is brooding and so full of angst over the Emerson curse, that he doesn’t really enjoy his life due to his anxiety over the future.
They were endearing in their own way, and though Jaya was often sanctimonious and neurotic (about putting your duties first, listening to your parents’ every word) and Grey, for the lack of a better term, often behaved like Edward Cullen in terms of broodiness and angst, I liked them all the more for their flaws. It made them real.
The supporting characters were pretty cool, and I enjoyed all of their backstories. They didn’t exist just for the two protagonists to get together. They had independent lives of their own which sometimes intersected with Jaya’s and Grey’s.
The only drawback, I’d say, was the lack of time dedicated to their falling in love. The way the writing was, they were right in that close friends zone where you are before you fall in love. There was no time devoted to the transition from that close friendship to their ILYs. I would have liked the book to be longer than what it is with this part alone included.
I really hope this becomes a series where Menon bases each book on a different “fairytale”, with all the characters being from this school. *I want a story for DE!* (Putting this in bold so that in case Menon reads this review, she knows this is what one fan would like to see.)
A definite read for people who adore cutesy romance YA with POC characters and good representation.
Thanks to the publishers and NetGalley for giving me this opportunity to read a book that I really wanted to!
P.S. It was absolutely lovely to see a character who calls her mom “Amma” and her dad “Appa” — I felt so represented by Jaya. I only wish someone had written stories with amazing rep when I was younger, like what Menon is doing today.
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Update (Feb 17, 2020): Apparently this IS a trilogy. So all I need to do now is sit and hope Menon writes a story for DE. My heart broke for her so many times! 3
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Update (Jan 19, 2020):
YOUR GIRL GOT APPROVED FOR THE ARC!!!
Do dreams ‘manifest’ in 2020 if you just take a shot?
This is the energy I want for the rest of this year.
Hope you’re all having a wonderful Sunday! ⚡️And a huge thank you to Hodder Books & Netgalley for giving me this chance! 💖
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Why I am excited about this book:
- Retelling of Beauty & The Beast with an Indian MC!
- interracial couple
- themes of colonialism
- set in a boarding school (say what)
I want an ARC so badly, sigh.
(Aug 23, 2019)