We Are the Beasts
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- $10.99
Publisher Description
Deaths and disappearances pile up as a mysterious beast stalks the French countryside and two girls seize an unlikely opportunity that just might save them all—or serve them up on a platter.
Step into this chilling, historical horror inspired by the unsolved mystery of the Beast of Gévaudan.
When a series of brutal, mysterious deaths start plaguing the countryside and whispers of a beast in the mountains reach the quiet French hamlet of Mende, most people believe it’s a curse—God’s punishment for their sins.
But to sixteen-year-old Joséphine and her best friend, Clara, the beast isn’t a curse. It’s an opportunity.
For years, the girls of Mende have been living in a nightmare—fathers who drink, brothers who punch, homes that feel like prisons—and this is a chance to get them out.
Using the creature’s attacks as cover, Joséphine and Clara set out to fake their friends’ deaths and hide them away until it’s safe to run. But escape is harder than they thought. If they can’t brave a harsh winter with little food… If the villagers discover what they’re doing… If the beast finds them first...
Those fake deaths might just become real ones.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In 1765, 16-year-olds Joséphine and Clara eke out a subsistence lifestyle herding sheep in the village of Mende in the Gévaudan region of France. Amid daily harsh realities of disease, starvation, and the threat of male violence, Mende has become the latest in Gévaudan to be attacked by a mysterious and insatiable beast that mainly targets young women and teen girls. As theories develop around the possible supernatural origins of the creature, Joséphine and Clara realize they can use the attacks to their advantage, staging brutal deaths to sneak their friends away from their abusive households. But as both the simulated and real death tolls mount, the growing infamy of the beast attracts glory-seeking soldiers, exponentially complicating Joséphine and Clara's web of deception. Using a spirited first-person narration peppered with French expressions, Griffis (The Wicked Unseen) reimagines the historical beast of Gévaudan attacks into a tale of female rage and empowerment after abuse. While the exploration of patriarchy feels underdeveloped, sweet moments of queer romance and affirming female friendships round out this heart-pounding and gruesome historical thriller. Joséphine is white; Clara is French Ethiopian. Ages 12–up.