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Book: “Gorgeous Gruesome Faces” by Linda Cheng
Publishing Info: Roaring Book Press, November 2023
Where Did I Get This Book: The library!
Where You Can Get This Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | Indiebound
Book Description: After a shocking scandal that abruptly ended her teen popstar career, eighteen-year-old Sunny Lee spends her days longing for her former life and cyberstalking her ex-BFF and groupmate, Candie. The two were once inseparable, but that was then—before the tragedy and heartache they left in their wake.
In the here and now, Sunny is surprised to discover that Candie is attending a new K-pop workshop in her hometown. Candie might be there chasing stardom, but Sunny can’t resist the chance to join her and finally confront their traumatic history. Because she still can’t figure out what happened that horrible night when Mina, the third in their tight-knit trio, jumped to her death. Or if the dark and otherworldly secrets she and Candie were keeping had something to do with it . . .
But the workshop doesn’t bring the answers Sunny had hoped for, nor a happy reunion with Candie. Instead, Sunny finds herself haunted by ghostly visions while strange injuries start happening to her competitors—followed by even stranger mutilations to their bodies. In her race to survive, Sunny will have to expose just who is behind the carnage—and if Candie is out for blood once more—in Linda Cheng’s spellbinding sapphic thriller that will have readers screaming and swooning for more.
Review: Happy 2024! I hope that you all had a good New Year Celebration, and that you are not as anxious about the coming year as I am. As the social hangover of the holidays wears off, I’m eager to get into the reviews of 2024, and we are starting off with something a little bit sapphic, a little bit fandom-y, and all kinds of odd in a good way. I saw “Gorgeous Gruesome Faces” by Linda Cheng as a Goodreads ad, and the title alone caught my attention. When I read that it was a horror thriller involving a K-pop competition and a former teen idol trying to start anew, I knew it was absolutely a must read for me. And then you throw in a twist involving some folklore from the Asian Diaspora? What a combination!
I do really like the set up for this book. We have our protagonist Sunny Lee, who used to be a part of a teen TV show that rocketed her and her two cast mates turned friends Candie and Mina into stardom, but whose career has crashed and burned after a massive scandal and the death of Mina. Her friendship (and potentially something more) with Candie crumbled, and she hasn’t seen her since their show ended. Now Sunny has joined a K-Pop competition that Candie has also joined, in hopes of getting back on her feet, and perhaps hashing things out with Candie. It has the set up for a soapy and cutthroat thriller, with past relationships, traumas, and baggage making things that much more tense. I loved the slow building of Sunny trying to connect with Candie again, as well as the way that other contestants start dropping like flies due to supposed accidents and breakdowns. Sunny was an interesting enough character, though I think that I wanted a bit more connection between her and Candie, as their past romance should make the mystery about Candie’s potential culpability and Sunny’s suspicions feel that much more high stakes, but as it was I wasn’t TOTALLY buying it (that said, there is the potential for another book, which could flesh it out a bit more).
When it comes to the dark fantasy and horror elements of this book, it was pretty creative and at times pretty brutal. I really enjoyed some of the descriptions of the way that characters faces would ‘change’, and become uncanny and unsettling, all while sending that person into a full blown panic, to the point of self mutilation and self harm. Body horror can really get under my skin, and in this book I definitely found myself squirming a bit. There is also some solid ‘ghost girl’ imagery, as Sunny starts to see visions of a washed out spectre of a broken girl who looks a lot like her dead friend and former cast mate Mina, whose death has haunted Sunny. I LOVED the descriptions of the stalking ghost, they really set my teeth on edge while feeling like a vengeful spirit from an A-Horror film. But there is also a bit of dark fantasy in here as well, as it draws upon the folktale of The Celestial Maiden and the Woodcutter, in which a goddess is basically held captive by a peasant after he stumbles upon her without her clothing, and hides them from her, rendering her unable to leave the Earth. Cheng really runs with the idea of the ‘held captive’ angle, and uses the concept of her supposed worshipers being given special abilities, but how darkness is always attached to those who use it. It was pretty unique in this regard, and I hope that we just see more and more nods to mythologies that we don’t see as often in modern literature.
I found “Gorgeous Gruesome Faces” to be entertaining and sufficiently creepy. I am absolutely going to check out where it goes from here when the next book in the series comes out.
Rating 7: A creative and at times nasty horror thriller about deities and K-Pop, “Gorgeous Gruesome Faces” is a solid YA thrill ride.
Reader’s Advisory:
“Gorgeous Gruesome Faces” is included on the Goodreads list “Queer Releases November 2023”.