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Hunted Hardcover – March 14, 2017
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Though Yeva grew up with the city's highest aristocrats, far from her father's old lodge, she knows that the forest holds secrets and that her father is the only hunter who's ever come close to discovering them.
So when her father loses his fortune and moves Yeva and her sisters back to the outskirts of town, Yeva is secretly relieved. Out in the wilderness, there's no pressure to make idle chatter with vapid baronessas...or to submit to marrying a wealthy gentleman. But Yeva's father's misfortune may have cost him his mind, and when he goes missing in the woods, Yeva sets her sights on one prey: the creature he'd been obsessively tracking just before his disappearance.
Deaf to her sisters' protests, Yeva hunts this strange Beast back into his own territory--a cursed valley, a ruined castle, and a world of creatures that Yeva's only heard about in fairy tales. A world that can bring her ruin or salvation. Who will survive: the Beauty, or the Beast?
- Print length384 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarperTeen
- Publication dateMarch 14, 2017
- Grade level8 - 12
- Reading age13 - 17 years
- Dimensions5.5 x 1.21 x 8.25 inches
- ISBN-100062422286
- ISBN-13978-0062422286
- Lexile measure1000L
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Editorial Reviews
Review
★ "A rich, Russian-influenced retelling of 'Beauty and the Beast.' Building upon a familiar tale, Spooner creates a detailed world populated by complex characters... reminiscent of Robin McKinley's and Patricia McKillip's novels, concerned with the power of stories." -- Kirkus, starred review
From the Back Cover
Beauty knows the Beast’s forest in her bones—and in her blood.
She knows that the forest holds secrets and that her father is the only hunter who’s ever come close to discovering them.
But Yeva’s grown up far from her father’s old lodge, raised to be part of the city’s highest caste of artistocrats. Still, she’s never forgotten the feel of a bow in her hands, and she’s spent a lifetime longing for the freedom of the hunt.
So when her father loses his fortune and moves Yeva and her sisters back to the outskirts of town, Yeva is secretly relieved. Out in the wilderness, there’s no pressure to make idle chatter with vapid baronessas . . . or to submit to marrying a wealthy gentleman.
But Yeva’s father’s misfortune may have cost him his mind, and when he goes missing in the woods, Yeva sets her sights on one prey: the creature he’d been obsessively tracking just before his disappearance.
Deaf to her sisters’ protests, Yeva hunts this strange Beast back into his own territory—a cursed valley, a ruined castle, and a world of creatures that Yeva’s heard about only in fairy tales. A world that can bring her ruin—or salvation.
Who will survive: the Beauty, or the Beast?
About the Author
New York Times bestselling author Meagan Spooner grew up reading and writing every spare moment of the day while dreaming about life as an archaeologist, a marine biologist, or an astronaut. She graduated from Hamilton College in New York State with a degree in playwriting. She’s traveled all over the world, to places such as Egypt, Australia, South Africa, the Arctic, Greece, Antarctica, and the Galápagos Islands, and there’s a bit of every trip in every story she writes. She currently lives and writes in Asheville, North Carolina, but the siren call of travel is hard to resist, and there’s no telling how long she’ll stay there. She’s the coauthor of the award-winning Starbound Trilogy (These Broken Stars, This Shattered World, Their Fractured Light) and the Skylark Trilogy (Skylark, Shadowlark, Lark Ascending) as well as this “Beauty and the Beast” retelling. In her spare time she plays guitar, plays video games, plays with her cat, and reads. www.meaganspooner.com
Product details
- Publisher : HarperTeen; International ed. edition (March 14, 2017)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 384 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0062422286
- ISBN-13 : 978-0062422286
- Reading age : 13 - 17 years
- Lexile measure : 1000L
- Grade level : 8 - 12
- Item Weight : 1 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 1.21 x 8.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #455,205 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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About the author

New York Times bestselling author Meagan Spooner grew up reading and writing every spare moment of the day, while dreaming about life as an archaeologist, a marine biologist, an astronaut. She graduated from Hamilton College in New York with a degree in playwriting, and has spent several years since then living in Australia. She’s traveled with her family all over the world to places like Egypt, South Africa, the Arctic, Greece, Antarctica, and the Galapagos, and there’s a bit of every trip in every story she writes.
She currently lives and writes in Asheville, North Carolina, but the siren call of travel is hard to resist, and there’s no telling how long she’ll stay there.
In her spare time she plays guitar, plays video games, plays with her cats, and reads.
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Yesa, whose actual name is Beauty, is her father’s daughter. She was taught by him to know how to handle herself in the woods. When she was young, Yesa’s father moved Beauty and her sisters away from the woods into the city in hopes of bettering their lives. Everything changes when her father loses the family’s entire fortune and they are forced to leave the city to live in a small shack in the woods. Yesa and her sisters are not overjoyed at the idea of living in the woods but they will make the best of it. Yesa’s father is determined to make things right by paying back the money he lost by selling the kills he will make in the woods. Everything goes from bad to worse when Yesa’s father does not return from the woods after a day of hunting. Everyone is afraid he has gone mad in the woods and something horrible has happened to him. Yesa knows she is the only one that can survive the woods and hunt down the monster that her father was originally tracking. Yesa quickly discovers that this monster is not an ordinary beast, it is so much more and it will change Yesa’s life forever.
If Spooner can do one thing it is weave a magical tale that will take a hold of you and never let go. This story sucked me in from page one. This was not the Disney-version I was used to. Instead, this tale was more based on the Rus/Russian folk tale using the Gray Wolf/Ivan myth. I was not as familiar with this version but quickly found it was just as encompassing as I had hoped it would be. It felt like a new spin on an old story. The world building of the woods, Beast’s castle, and the characters/animals within were enchanting. When Beauty/Yesa is locked in the dungeon after being captured, I could have sworn I felt the cold seeping from the brick walls. It was all so vivid that I often felt I was right there with the characters. That was impressive.
The characters of this story were brilliant. I felt as if every single one of them had a very distinct voice and personality. That goes for the mythical characters as well. Beauty/Yesa was so well developed. She acted and moved like a true woodsman hunter. When she finally comes into contact with Beast, their interactions were fluid. It seemed their banter came easily. Beast was used to getting his way and Beauty was just as stubborn. Beauty’s true strength came out more when she was fighting to stay alive in the dungeon. She fights every single day because knows she has to get through it in order to avenge her father and return to her sisters. Throughout the story Beauty seemed torn between saving herself and taking care of her family. She wants to save everyone but she knows that is not an option. The love and respect she had for her sisters was breathtaking. Beast’s character was so intriguing. Very little is given away in the early part of the story. You know he is a threat and very dangerous, but not where he comes from. Slowly his story comes out and you start to see him in a different light. You start to realize that he really isn’t as bad as he was made out to be. But throughout that, you want to see if these characters continue to grow and develop with every passing challenge.
I’m really, really trying hard to not give too much away with this story. I hope that everyone is excited for this release and will give it a chance. I enjoyed this book so much that I feel I am struggling to express myself properly. It is so full of magic, fantasy, adventure, family, relationships, sacrifice, self discovery, legends, myths, and more! Please, add it to your TBR if it isn’t already. Everyone needs to read this story.
PLOT
Hunted is the story of Yeva aka Beauty and her love for the hunt & desire for more than court life (reminds me of one of my fave protogs Freya from Long May She Reign). Yeva has only known the wealthy aristocratic life keeping the baronessa company which she finds boring & constricting. She is the youngest of 3 girls and lives with her father who is known as a wealthy business merchant. It is a business deal with good intentions-gone wrong that throws Yeva and her family into poverty. Forced to sell their home & live in their father’s cabin in the forest, their lives drastically changed. The shame & disappointment of it all proves to be too much for Yeva’s father. The Goodreads synopsis sums up the events that transpire following their misfortune. On the surface Hunted is a re-telling that runs parallel with the original classic Beauty & the Beast. However, besides the similarities this story is also about want & greed and the consequences of never being sated. Starting with a father who wanting more for his village, went as far as staking his entire mass fortune. We see Yeva abandon her home where her sisters depend on her hunting skills for their livelihood, in search of their father who’s gone missing. The thrill of the hunt has always called to Yeva who like her father, has a natural skill for it. The Beast also has his story but revealing that here would be a spoiler so i’ll keep that one to myself lol. Just as in the original, the Beast is cursed and is in need of rescuing…I think this is what I love most of this tale, that the Beauty or princess isn’t in need of rescuing.
CHARACTERS
I love seeing YA Fantasy turn the tables on the outdated trope of the princess needs saving & so it’s no wonder why I end up loving the Yeva’s & Freya’s of YA Fantasy. I enjoyed Yeva as a character because of her flaws, she isn’t Belle from BATB although they do share similarities. We see Yeva make questionable decisions and ultimately also be affected by her unquenchable desire for more. When I got to thinking about Yeva, I realized this made her all the more human to me. We also meet her two older sisters Lena and Asenka, & I liked them alright as supporting characters. Asenka has a physical disability that she hides and like Lena focuses on keeping the house maintained. Asenka is a giver she will sacrifice it all for her family & I rooted for hers all through the end. Lena wasn’t all too fleshed out but what I saw of her, I liked enough. Now, the real show stopper award goes to Doe-Eyes, Yeva’s hunting dog who previously hunted with her father. From what I could gather, Doe-Eyes is a female dog (I may be wrong but this is what i’m going with lol) & very loyal. Wherever Yeva went, Doe-Eyes would follow no matter how impossible this feat may have seemed. To say that I fell in love with this dog is an understatement, Doe-Eyes was spunky & lively, she wasn’t getting left behind from all the action. I couldn’t get enough of her whenever she showed up unexpectedly (Yay for dogs in YA!). Last but not least we have the Beast (I promise I did not intend for that to rhyme -_-) who just as in the original, we get brief glimpses of. What I loved about Beast? the fact that we see him warring with the human nature he carries within. We also get to know his backstory of how he came to be cursed which unlike the original, actually has some meat to it. Besides his backstory, everything else about Beast is pretty similar to the original & I appreciated Spooner staying close to the original while still making him her own.
WRITING & FINAL THOUGHTS
Hunted is my very first read by Meagan Spooner & I’m officially a fan! this book gave me such Bear and the Nightingale (LOVED!) feels with its use of Russian Folklore. The story telling was on point. I’m always weary when picking up a re-telling of a childhood favorite but Spooner pulled it off with Hunted. Maybe it was the mixture of similarities to the original & her own take on it but…I felt like I got a piece of my childhood back, a very nostalgic reading experience. I especially enjoyed the chapter “enders” (made this word up) where we were given the Beast’s inner monologue as the human inside him wars against the beast he’s become. The pacing is a bit on the slower side but I’m the type of bookworm that doesn’t mind the slow build-up. I don’t however think that it’s so slow that it drags or bores, it felt like I was being read a fairy tale which is what I wanted. To date, this is my favorite Beauty and the Beast re-telling. It has me listening to the original soundtrack & watching the original just to stay a little longer with this tale as old as time…
*Thank you HarperTeen, Edelweiss, and Meagan Spooner for the eGalley of Hunted in exchange for an honest review, all opinions are my own.
Top reviews from other countries

Não que eu seja a maior fã de releituras e que vá atrás de livros assim, mas, se todas fossem nesse nível, eu seria e iria. Apesar de ter sido o filme que mais assisti quando era criança, nunca gostei tanto da história da Bela e a Fera quanto nesse livro. Todo o enredo ficou tão natural na escrita da Meagan Spooner, que pareceu sempre ser uma história completamente de sua autoria. Nenhum dos vários detalhes que esse livro tem em comum com a história original pareceu forçado. É assim que se faz uma releitura!
Amei descobrir que a história é ambientada em uma Rússia medieval, que a autora incluiu elementos do folclore russo aqui (que eu reconheci por outros livros que li que tinham essa mesma inspiração) e principalmente que não teve medo de encarar nenhuma parte da história que criou, nenhum problema que poderia ameaçar a ideia romântica que vem junto com o conto de fadas. Amei também ver que, além de não romantizar a relação da Yeva com a Fera, a autora fez questão de falar, ainda que brevemente, sobre violência doméstica e comparar sua situação, para não deixar nenhum detalhe dela não analisado.
Também amei as personagens mulheres em volta da Yeva e como ela não as julgava, ainda que tivessem interesses diferentes. Amei ver que ela não tinha nada realmente contra os vestidos e a etiqueta que eram exigidos de todas as mulheres, só não os queria. Em momento algum ela diminui uma outra mulher, pelo contrário. Adorei ver a relação dela com as irmãs, que são duas maravilhosas também, desde o começo até o final. E até os personagens homens desse livro são adoráveis. Quero o Solmir para mim, só digo isso.
A Fera também foi excelente, complicada e interessante desde o começo. Mas ninguém nesse livro ganha da Yeva, complexa e cheia de camadas diferentes, de um jeito que você sente a presença firme dela e de sua personalidade logo no primeiro capítulo. Tem tanto livro por aí com personagens femininas que caçam e são chamadas de incríveis por isso, mas aqui, essa habilidade da Yeva nunca é abordada de um jeito arrogante ou prepotente. Nem é a única prova de que ela é realmente forte e interessante. Yeva é uma personagem completa como poucas que encontro na maioria das obras que dizem ter protagonistas assim.
Sim, esse livro é excelente. A mensagem dele é excelente, e a autora não poderia ter feito um trabalho melhor. Recomendo absolutamente para todo mundo que souber ler em inglês e vou ter que ficar torcendo aqui para alguma editora no Brasil publicar para eu poder fazer todas minhas amigas leitoras lerem. E agora faço questão de ler o outro da autora, Sherwood, mas de também dar uma chance para livros seus que nada têm a ver com contos de fadas. Ela escreveu maravilhosamente bem desde o começo, e eu me apaixonei pela sua escrita e sua história.


Auch im Buch selbst ist es sehr schön. Besonders die Kapitel des Beasts haben es Mir angetan da man seine Entwicklung sehr gut erkennen kann.
Inhalt: ich denke zum Inhalt muss ich nicht mehr viel sagen.
Da ich schon viele Beauty and the beast Adaptionen gelesen habe bin ich sehr kritisch aber diese Story hebt sich einfach von anderen Beauty and the beast Erzählungen ab.
Schreibstiel: der Schreibstil ist sehr flüssig und einfach mächchenhaft.
Ich kann dieses Buch jedem empfehlen, der gerne Märchen liest und kein Problem mit der Sprache hat. Für mich war alles sehr gut verständlich und ich musste nur selten ein Wort nachschlagen.


Reviewed in Germany on December 23, 2018
Auch im Buch selbst ist es sehr schön. Besonders die Kapitel des Beasts haben es Mir angetan da man seine Entwicklung sehr gut erkennen kann.
Inhalt: ich denke zum Inhalt muss ich nicht mehr viel sagen.
Da ich schon viele Beauty and the beast Adaptionen gelesen habe bin ich sehr kritisch aber diese Story hebt sich einfach von anderen Beauty and the beast Erzählungen ab.
Schreibstiel: der Schreibstil ist sehr flüssig und einfach mächchenhaft.
Ich kann dieses Buch jedem empfehlen, der gerne Märchen liest und kein Problem mit der Sprache hat. Für mich war alles sehr gut verständlich und ich musste nur selten ein Wort nachschlagen.



But this book was NOT cliche!
Whilst it ended romantically, there was little romance in this story. There was grittiness, there was raw emotion (often the more violent emotions like rage, and vengeance), there was realism. Yes, Yeva was made to feel indebted to the Beast, and at first that made her have feelings for him, understandably. But as soon as the blindfold was off, that all changed, and Yeva reacted exactly how any person on this planet would react to a monstrous beast locking her up. The characters touched upon Stockholm Syndrome and I thought that was cleverly done and how Yeva didn’t dismiss this, but rather worked through her thoughts and feelings.
Yeva was a real girl crush for me. I honestly would have followed her anywhere.
I like how there was internal conflict for Yeva that made the story tense, and how Meagan didn’t fall into the trap of needing to create tension between sisters, or with other love interests. This to me shows far more skill as an author than simply making other characters give your MC a hard time.
Yeva to me was brave, she didn’t shy away from her weaknesses and she was very intelligent. The hunting thing didn’t make her a strong female character to me, it was her mind, and her heart that did this. Take away the bow and I still would have called Yeva strong, so thank you Meagan for not making it all about a girl who knows how to wield a weapon (which many of us cannot, and will not ever be able to relate to anyway).
It was torturous reading the Beast’s chapters and Meagan did an amazing job of showing his humanity surfacing. When his chapters stopped, I think my heart stopped too (!)
My advice? Pick this up, now. You’re missing out.

The reader is also left with something to ponder on at the end. It certainly has me thinking and reflecting.
I really got lost in this book and could see, hear, smell, and even at times feel what was going on. Good writing.
If you like fantasy, fairy tales, great characters, emotion, and 'beauty', then give this story a go.