Angie
Written on Sep 21, 2016
My favorite part of Beast was Dylan’s voice. He felt authentic. Sure, I wanted to smack him sometimes, but he felt real to me. He’s so caught up in his own problems that he completely misses Jamie mentioning that she’s trans, and he never asks his supposed best friend how things are at home even knowing his mother is an alcoholic. His world revolves around how tall and big and hairy he is, and how girls think he’s ugly and boys are afraid of him. That’s now at all how Dylan wants to be seen, so I get it, I do. In fact, I think a lot of people can relate to not being seen by others how you see yourself. Maybe that makes you miss out on how others are feeling, but that’s life.
However, my least favorite part of Beast was J.P., the supposed best friend. He uses Dylan to intimidate people into paying back “loans.” He’s super attractive and gets whatever he wants. Dylan is jealous at times, but then he realizes that J.P. is no friend at all (not that Dylan is perfect in their relationship). There is a confrontation, and I just didn’t believe it. I couldn’t wrap my hear around J.P. as a character at all. Was he being sincere, or was this just another manipulation? I know in real life there are people you can’t quite figure out, but J.P. didn’t read that way to me at all. He just felt like incomplete to me. Not to mention that Jamie falls for his charms, but doesn’t really, but kind of does? I don’t even know. That whole situation didn’t feel completely worked out to me, almost like it was a forced way to have all three characters together and trying to talk things out. I don’t know.
Overall, I really enjoyed Beast. Dylan had a fresh voice and point of view. I liked how his relationship with Jamie developed and how it brought up questions about sexuality and then firmly answered them (no, you don’t have to be gay/bi/poly/pan/whatever to be attracted to a trans person). I loved how Jamie wouldn’t put up with Dylan’s crap!
Read more of my reviews at Pinkindle Reads & Reviews.