I'd never heard of either Paul Margs or his book Never the Bride before, which deeply shocked the woman who I was speaking to at the time. She got me a copy and, a week or so later, it was in my hands and I began to read. The reason for the depth of her shock became clear once I started reading; I found it one of the most fun and, I must admit, one of the most unusual novels, largely because of the book's unique twist. The title provides a hint to the identity of the character, so I don't think I am dropping too many spoilers here, but the twist came in the form of the protagonist trying energetically to escape her previous destiny-one she had been dubbed unworthy of accomplishing by her creator- and to lead as quiet and peaceful a life as she could.
This is quite an unusual turn from the mental images of so-called “monsters” I had when growing up, who were usual depicted as unnatural things (organic or otherwise) who had a serious bone to pick with the human race, and would spend all their time and energy throughout the course of the book trying to satiate their continued and often confusing need for revenge until bested by the hero.
And there was much rejoicing.
Brenda, the central character of the book, is of a different stripe. She doesn't dwell in a remote mountain pass, or under a bridge, or anywhere that someone such as hers would normally be expected to dwell. Instead, after many decades of moving from place to place, she settles in a small English seaside town and sets about the business of being utterly, completely, and thoroughly normal. She runs a B&B; she has a best friend named Effie and they play Bingo and go out for fish and chips together. Brenda has the life she has always wanted, and everything is going fine.
But then, as it so often does to all of us, the unusual finally catches up with Brenda. A beauty salon opens in town, claiming to be able to restore one's youth and beauty, but at the potential risk of turning them into a wretched monkey/human hybrid. A family of escapee extraterrestials who just happen to live on Earth book rooms at her establishment, and are followed by a mysterious pursuer, and Brenda and Effie are also hit full in the face by the unsettling development at the Christmas Hotel, reported to them by an undercover elf.
It is not that these escapades are entertaining, as they are, but what really hooked me onto them is how much the book has to say. It talks about how your past, one way or another, always tends to catch up with you. It talks about how easily one's life can be turned upside down, no matter how carefully arranged, and how when it does it is important to know who you can count on and who your friends are. It says, in essence, that no matter what we look like or where we come from, there are things that makes us all the same.
I highly recommend this book; it has humor, drama, adventure, intense amounts of oddity, and many an important life lesson to impart. How could you go wrong?