Every exquisite thing by Lauren Steven

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Laura Steven has created a modern-day homage to Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray, setting it within the image-centric world of an emotionally tortured young actress. Penny Paxton is the daughter of the famous, beautiful and youthful-looking, Peggy Paxton. Penny’s place at the famous Dorian Drama Academy is on her own merits, but inside Penny is the perpetual torment of not being good enough, beautiful enough or thin enough, and the overriding ‘never-enough’ to be really loved by her mother is always with her. Amongst her fellow students Penny experiences competition, friendship and uncertainty and the beginnings of romance, and the quest for the lead roles comes with added internal turmoil. But not everything is about the modern-day competitive world of the potential stage and film stars of the future, there is also the darkly gothic influence of a past almost-ghostly mystery. Interweaving story threads from The Picture of Dorian Gray this is a powerful tale of the dreadful nature of unhealthy beauty principles and of misplaced ideals bordering on idolisation.

This is a deeply moving and strangely confronting story! The darkly mystical world that overlaps the real world In Every Exquisite Thing makes this book a brilliant YA coming-of-age drama with gothic overtones. There are many aspects of the plot that draw closely from Wilde’s storyline (even names are borrowed from the original, and the title comes directly from an Oscar Wilde quote), but it is not necessary to have read the original inspiration to enjoy this book. The central character also grapples with contemporary issues – her identity, her same-sex attractions, and her motivations for success. But behind much of the story is the power of image and its compelling influence – a thematic thread that is so prevalent in the lives of teens in our image-obsessed digital world. Initially the story is mostly embedded in the stresses and joys of the contemporary world of the USA Drama institution and that itself is fascinating and compelling, but as the story progresses and it enters the mystical, dark world behind images and mirrors, the story becomes gothic in tone and direction. This will appeal to a whole new cohort of readers – provided they are mature.

Recommended for readers aged 15+.

Themes: Body image, Identity, Acting, Beauty, Disordered eating, Addiction, Family disfunction, LGBTIQ+.

Carolyn Hull

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