YA Friday: Scarlet by A.C. Gaughen

Friday, March 09, 2012

Title: Scarlet
Author: A.C. Gaughen
Genre: YA, fantasy
Publisher: Walker Children's, 2012
Source: NetGalley
Read for: Review

Robin Hood's gang of boys devoted to protecting Sherwood Forest from the evil, over-taxing Sheriff of Nottingham (endorsed, of course, by King Richard's power-hungry younger brother, Prince John, who will always and forever appear to me as the skinny lion from the animated Disney version of Robin Hood), is constituted of the usual suspects -- the tall Little John, the sweet Much, the crafty, stealthy Will Scarlet. However, known to few, Will Scarlet is actually just Scarlet, a girl who eked out her life by stealing in London, who managed to meet up with Robin and joined his band. The pressures for the villagers mount as a new thief taker, Guy of Gisbourne, comes to root out Robin Hood and his band. Scarlet has a history with Gisbourne, and knows she must avoid being seen by him at all costs. In addition, John is beginning to indicate that he is interested in her, when her heart really belongs to Robin.

This new retelling of Robin Hood offers some unexpected twists while maintaining the roster of beloved characters and mainly staying faithful to the legend. My main familiarity with Robin Hood comes from the Disney movie and the Kevin Costner film, Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (which, incidentally, is amazing. Go watch it. Ignore the fact that the accents suck). In addition, there is Robin Hood: Men in Tights, which is ridiculous, but has Cary Elwes in it, so all is forgiven, the Robin Hood movie with Russell Crowe (which was decent but unmemorable, for me at least), and a BBC series (which I haven't watched). Robin Hood is also mentioned in Ivanhoe by Sir Walter Scott. I'm sure dozens of other retellings also exist. I guess what I'm saying is that I'm familiar with it, but with so many different media versions, I can't positively say how well the story follows, but it felt pretty true to the retelling, with some clever and completely unexpected twists. I was very satisfied with the way things fell together at the end as far as staying true to the story.

However, there were some tricky elements to the book. It is told entirely from Scarlet's point of view, and it is told in dialect. While I eventually fell into the rhythm, it detracted from the story for me, rather than adding to it. As I learned more about Scarlet's past, it felt particularly contrived. While it ceased to distract me after the first hundred pages or so, it never seemed to quite fit with the rest of the book.

The love triangle in the book also became a bit sticky for awhile, leaving me extremely frustrated with the characters' behavior. I wanted to give John, Robin, and Scarlet all a slap for acting like dorks and not communicating. However, I do think that the love triangle was essential for the story, and in the end  added to it rather than detracting from it. While the characters infuriated me from time to time, I think the love elements worked well with the story as a whole.

And it was the plot as a whole that was powerful, not the romance, although it had its moments. The heroism of John, Much, and especially Scarlet and Robin, were grand and sweeping. The last 50 or so pages were one passionate and adventurous and moving. I was gasping over and over again -- there was so much carnage and passion and drama. While the beginning of the story had been ho-hum for me, the last scenes redeemed it, to an extent, as everything came together and many of the characters' secrets were revealed.

For me, Scarlet lacked that absolute luster that makes me gush for days about a book, but it was almost there. If the entire book had been like the last several pages, I would be recommending it left and right. As it stands now, I can say it is a decent book with some excellent closing scenes, and that as this is A.C. Gaughen's debut I am looking forward to what she comes up with in the years to come.

3.75 stars

Warnings: Violence (quite a bit of it), some references to the bedroom

8 comments:

  1. Robin Hood has never been my favorite story, so I probably won't be picking this one up. But have you read Outlaws of Sherwood, by Robin McKinley? That's a Robin Hood retelling that totally rocks!

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    1. I am totally adding it to my TBR right now. I've got to start reading Robin McKinley soon -- I hear nothing but good things about her!

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  2. I'm excited for this one but I keep hearing mixed reviews. Maybe I should try to get it at the library rather than buy it???

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    1. Yeah, I would say it's a better borrow than buy. Worth reading, but maybe not rereading.

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  3. I want to read this one so much it hurts. I am kicking myself daily for not grabbing it from NetGalley. I'm *hoping* one of my libraries gets a copy and soon. ;)

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    1. NetGalley was really stealthy about it -- they only opened it up for like three days and then archived it again. I hope you get your hands on it soon! I think it is a book that you would really enjoy.

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  4. Thank you for including pictures from Disney's Robin Hood-the first adaptation I knew!

    I also had problems with the actions of the characters in the triangle-a distinct lack of communication and some stupid choices made by all partners.

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    1. Stupid choices is the perfect way to put it. I tried to rationalize it remembering how I acted around boys when I was a teenager, and how every little thing made me feel insecure, but I still think I would have handled it better than Scarlet.

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