Parents' Guide to The Beautiful, The Beautiful Quartet, Book 1

Book Renee Ahdieh Fantasy 2020
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Common Sense Media Review

Sandie Angulo Chen By Sandie Angulo Chen , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 14+

Steamy, atmospheric paranormal romance set in New Orleans.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 14+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 14+

Based on 1 parent review

age 14+

Based on 1 kid review

What's the Story?

THE BEAUTIFUL starts with Celine Rousseau, a French, half-East Asian, half-white 17-year-old who flees Paris after surviving a personal tragedy in 1872. Arriving in New Orleans, Celine lives in a convent of Ursuline nuns who take in six wayward girls. Celine quickly becomes involved in the glamorous group La Cour des Lions who seem like a salon of rich, international hedonists after she crosses paths with its leader, the sexy and mysterious Sébastien ("Bastien") Saint Germain and his sisterly best friend Odette, who's the kind of independent, empowered woman Celine wishes she had the freedom to become. When the dead body of one of the girls from the convent is found in the La Cour headquarters, it's clear there's a killer on the loose, and Celine could be next.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say ( 1 ):
Kids say ( 1 ):

Author Renée Ahdieh pays homage to Anne Rice's thrillers in this period New Orleans-set vampire romance that features a clever, diverse, and sexy cast of characters. In her author letter, Ahdieh acknowledges how much she loved Rice's Vampire Chronicles (the most famous of which is Interview With a Vampire), and it's clear she is in some way recreating and refreshing Rice's themes and locations in The Beautiful. Even the title is familiar -- both a description of the gorgeous La Cour de Lions crowd and a nod to F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Beautiful and the Damned (The Damned is also the name of this book's follow-up, out in June, 2020). But instead of being about rich young socialites who suffer a downfall in Jazz Age New York, this is about a young woman caught up in the world of rich supernatural socialites in post-Civil War NOLA.

Ahdieh is wonderful at building romantic tension, and Celine and Bastien share a palpable slow-burn chemistry from their first encounter onward. Occasionally there are repetitious descriptions of Bastien's devilish charm, Celine's "inner creature" (obviously her growing desire), and their push-and-pull feelings for each other. Most of the characters have culturally diverse backgrounds, New Orleans having been a melting pot of that era, and both Celine and Bastien speak more than English on a regular basis. The pacing adds to the sense of peril and the mystery of who is committing all the heinous crimes. As for the romance, the burgeoning love triangle is an unwelcome but standard feature in speculative teen fiction. One minor complaint is that while Celine's and Bastien's ages make sense, the age of Michael, Celine's other suitor and Bastien's best-friend turned rival, seems unrealistically young (teen detectives?). It's also hard to believe anyone would want Celine and Michael to end up together, no matter how great his Italian grandmother is in that one scene. Ahdieh captures the spirit of New Orleans and the allure of being free of societal restrictions based on gender, class, or perceived virtue. Readers will be ready for the next and final installment, which should answer burning questions and result in a happier ending.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about the enduring popularity of paranormal romances like The Beautiful. Why do you think they remain popular? Do you think vampire romances are making a comeback now that Twilight is more than a decade old?

  • What does Bastien mean that men "risk little" by "taking a woman to bed" but women "risk everything" (reputation, future, well-being)? Do you agree with his statement, or is that no longer the case? What about that idea still resonates in today's culture?

  • Which characters, if any, do you consider role models in the book? What character strengths do they display? Do books need role models if they're aimed at kids and teens?

  • What do you think about the amount of violence in The Beautiful? Is it necessary to the plot? How does book violence affect people differently than on-screen violence?

Book Details

  • Author : Renee Ahdieh
  • Genre : Fantasy
  • Topics : Fantasy ( Magic )
  • Book type : Fiction
  • Publisher : Penguin Young Readers Group
  • Publication date : February 2, 2020
  • Publisher's recommended age(s) : 12 - 18
  • Number of pages : 448
  • Available on : Paperback, Nook, Audiobook (unabridged), Hardback, Apple Books, Kindle
  • Last updated : September 29, 2025

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