This is a spoiler-free review! The version I am reading is an ARC - any changes made for the final publication are not reflected in this review. Part of Your World is available to purchase as of September 4, 2018.
I loved Braswell's The Nine Lives of Chloe King series and was obsessed with the television (RIP ABC Family and not getting a second season renewal), and with this ARC sitting on my shelf for years, it was finally the time to see what other genres she could tackle. If you are a regular follower of my reviews, you may notice the current theme of me trying to tackle all of the old ARCs that have been haunting me and begging me to read them. I have a lot of mixed feelings about this retelling / reimagining of The Little Mermaid, with the top being that I simply did not love the number of perspectives we were given in this book.
While I understand that there are a number of key players in the original story and in Braswell's reimagining, the pacing felt clunky at times when we were being thrown from one perspective to another, especially when it was for a character that did not seem to have a lot of actual impact on the plot of the book. Sure, the seagull was able to deliver important information to other characters, but was it necessary that she get numerous chapters in her perspective? There were times in other chapters where the perspectives were for multiple characters, which was not my cup of tea.
Eric's characterization definitely played off of his character in the animation, but it also took it a step further and gave us Ursula's perspective on how idiotic or "mad" he was, when he simply was a creative type rather than a rule follower. He is definitely the most care-free character of the bunch, which does give the book an element of innocence as the others work towards the common goal of saving King Triton. Ariel's characterization shows her maturity after all the time that has past since Ursula got her way - she is more reserved, no longer the free spirit we have seen in the cartoon. I did appreciate the way she was developed throughout the story, especially that she did not waiver on her feelings even after the major plot points were overcome.
A lot of the side characters felt unnecessary or just there to serve a purpose to provide nostalgia towards what we all know, but I felt as though they really did not add enough to the story to warrant their own perspectives at times. If the author rather chose to incorporate their efforts in aiding Ariel and Eric on their journeys as side commentary in Eric and Ariel's own chapters, then we might have been able to avoid the jumps making the pacing become choppy.
The plot and reimagining as a whole is a unique concept that could have benefited from some more structured plot development along with recentering how the side characters come into play in support for our leading characters. I probably will not read any of the other Twisted Tales reimaginings in the future solely because I am not typically drawn towards the genre. I wish I was able to get into this book like I was am to get into Braswell's The Nine Lives of Chloe King, but perhaps I am simply not the target audience.
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