Title: Lies Beneath
Story Arc: Series, Book #1
Publication: June 12, 2012 by Delacorte/Random House
Hardcover: 303 pages
Genre: Mermaids, Paranormal, Mythology, Urban Fantasy
Age Group: Teen/Young Adult
Content: Killing
Source: Random House via NetGalley |
Quote(s): Yes
I hadn't killed anyone all winter, and I have to say I felt pretty good about that.
Calder White lives in the cold, clear waters of Lake Superior, the only brother in a family of murderous mermaids. To survive, Calder and his sisters prey on humans, killing them to absorb their energy. But this summer the underwater clan targets Jason Hancock out of pure revenge.
They blame Hancock for their mother's death and have been waiting a long time for him to return to his family's homestead on the lake. Hancock has a fear of water, so to lure him in, Calder sets out to seduce Hancock's daughter, Lily. Easy enough—especially as Calder has lots of practice using his irresistable good looks and charm on ususpecting girls.
Only this time Calder screws everything up: he falls for Lily—just as Lily starts to suspect that there's more to the monsters-in-the-lake legends than she ever imagined. And just as his sisters are losing patience with him.
The cover isn’t the only thing not working for me
Have you guys SEEN that cover? I get that the girl must be one of Calder White’s three mermaid sisters, BUT wouldn’t it have been more appropriate to have—gee, I don’t know—Calder himself on the cover? I WANT TO SEE A HUNKY MERMAN, darnit. But, I digress. The cover of
Lies Beneath by Anne Greenwood Brown isn’t the only thing that puts me off to this book now that I’ve completed it. I DESPISE that this book has such intriguing, fascinating mermaid lore integrated in the story, AND YET
Lies Beneath by Anne Greenwood Brown falls prey to the SO OVERDONE romance factor in paranormal books. Guy meets girl with malicious intent, guy sees how amazing girl is, and suddenly they want to go off and make out on the hammock in the forest. Lily herself is so annoyingly impervious to his history, his makeup, his purpose in her life, HIS APPETITE FOR BOB'S SAKE, that I wanted to bash some SENSE into the girl.
But why does Calder White have to do the falling? Why CAN’T, for once, the guy go in there with an I’m Going to Kill You purpose in my mind and actually follow through with it. WOULDN’T THAT MAKE FOR A MORE INTERESTING STORY LINE? I can guarantee no one would see that coming. Or maybe he takes pity and has mercy on the girl for an entirely different reason, so long as that reason doesn't have to do with him suddenly, SWIFTLY developing unexplainable feelings for the girl in question. I realize this is starting to sound like a rant, but GOSH DARN who made off with all the originality while our backs were turned?
In the beginning
Man, I was really getting into
Lies Beneath by Anne Greenwood Brown initially. Calder is at the Bahamas pondering his kill-free winter and his remarkable self-control to maintain his current record. He’s starting to get a tad twitchy about his expanding appetite, which he’s been stubbornly taming for an unclearly defined reason that still puzzles him. Just as he's ready to say to hell with dieting, he gets a call from his heartless people-eating mermaid sister. So, yeah, Calder is a merman. And he’s supposed to migrate back home to Lake Superior with his family, which consists of three sisters—Maris, Tallulah, and Pavati. Of course, he’s expecting this call, predicting the conversation to be about his no-show all winter and how the weeks are counting down until he can't resist the pull to migrate anymore.
Fortunately, THIS call is actually different than what he expected. Turns out, the object of their revenge has FINALLY found his way back to Calder’s home. Now the debt left unfulfilled by Jason Hancock’s father will at long last be satisfied. RIVETING, right? I know I was (riveted, that is). Throw in Calder’s seizure-like transformations from merperson to human, and all the deets in between about their species and I had to swipe at some stray bits of foam dotting the corners of my mouth. WHO is Tom and Jason Hancock and WHY are the EVIL MERMAIDS so ticked off at them both? What does this alleged contract have to do with Calder’s mother’s death? And why must Jason pay the penalty resulting in a horrible death?
Then there’s all the questions that surface about how mermaids are able to shift forms, procreate, and so on that I don’t see how anyone could be bored at this point.
When things get fraked up
Part of this wicked mer family’s plan is to lure Jason into the water. To do that they need a reasonable and logical stand-in to use as bait. Jason might’ve heard the stories of creatures slithering through the ocean from his father, might’ve taken them to heart SO someone very vital to his life will have to draw him into the danger-infested waters of Lake Superior. OF COURSE, that makes the target one of Jason’s two daughters. The mission? Get close, REAL close and earn trust. Blah blah blah, you know how it goes in all the BEST espionage movies and paranormal books. What I didn’t understand? These are, may I remind you, EVIL mermaids with superpowers, including the one to shift into human form. Why is it inconceivable to snatch him from his bed and drown the shizz out of him? Why go about making and attempting to execute this REALLY convoluted plan when things could be so much more simple?
After that decision’s made is when things lean toward the sticky and eye-rollably TYPICAL. Calder White is enchanted by Lily Hancock’s astounding self-control and instincts toward his true nature, he is crushing on her flair for the dramatic, her wannabe modernized Victorian poet wardrobe, and her love of poetry. After so little time I had to shake my head. And Lily, of course, is all feigned resistance and snooty attitude toward his self-assured conversation tactics and so on. PLEASE, I am so OVER this set-up.
Where are the smart girls who don’t believe in sunshine and flowery images of sweet little mermaids reminiscent of Ariel? Where are the SANE girls who COMPREHEND when Calder is saying, Look, I’m a killer, right to their faces and ACTUALLY RUN AWAY? I’m sorry, but if I find out my beau is the feeding-on-humans type (unless we're talking Edward Cullen here, because then I'm sunk) with the fins and everything, I’m more than likely going to be out the nearest Exit sign quicker than Speedy Gonzales.
Eventually, I got tired and BORED
I liked having a guy’s POV to turn to. I enjoyed reading from Calder’s perspective, learning about his foggy history and how he came to be part of his family, came to be a merman. His push and pull toward humans, their emotions, etc. He’s relatable in a way that’s unexpected, not so much because he’s, you know, A CREATURE OF THE SEA, but because he seems empty at first. A husk of a person. And then you just start to see how lonely, miserable, and uncertain he is. A person with questions, and needs, in which I could resonate. There’s this repulsion of his kind, of him and how he and his sisters teem humans to survive, and yet it’s easy to feel strangely close to him. I still wouldn't date him, though.
Even so, at some point a little more than halfway through I got tired of trudging through a rather predictable plot, no matter how many twists were incorporated to make the trimmings a little more unique. I kept persevering despite the boredom that eventually caught on, however, because I also realized that I was actually interested in the outcome. Never mind that I’d already invested SO MUCH TIME into
Lies Beneath by Anne Greenwood Brown by that point.
Ultimately, I enjoyed a decent chunk of the novel, excluding the latter half, and although I wasn’t altogether pleased with the cliché ending—apart from one nicely done, unexpected twist—I feel relieved that I finished
Lies Beneath by Anne Greenwood Brown instead of the alternative. Now it’s not looming in the back of my mind. Unfortunately,
Lies Beneath by Anne Greenwood Brown is a story I can see myself forgetting in the near future, and so I won’t be overrun with urgency for
Deep Betrayal, the sequel.
"But how do you do it, Lily? What are the mechanics?"
WAIT. It's not what it sounds like.
"Forgiveness? I don't have a choice. Or at least, no other good choices."
"I'm not sure I can forgive them for what they tried to do last night..."
"Forgiveness isn't just for them, Calder. It's for you. Forgiveness is freedom. It's something you do for yourself—to keep who you are intact. Now that I think about it—in some ways, it's kind of a selfish act." (86%)
Rating: Guilty Pleasure
While Lies Beneath by Anne Greenwood Brown drifts away from the bubbly, lighthearted, and frivolous mermaid books that are better at giving you warm and fuzzies than all sorts of chills, I wasn’t utterly impressed. The mermaids are vicious, yes. The lore intriguing, certainly. However, after the first half of the novel, the plot started leaning toward predictable, the romance crossing into the been there, read that region to the point where I was more turned off than I expected. Powering through that last half took a lot of patience, and, once I was finished, the conclusion didn’t quite fulfill my needs. Although I won’t be returning, or, more reasonable to assume, eager, for the sequel, Lies Beneath by Anne Greenwood Brown definitely deviates from the quintessential carefree, happy mermaid tales and goes somewhere delightfully dark and practical.
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