Skip to main content

The Phantom's Apprentice by Heather Webb: A Book Review

The Phantom's Apprentice
Author: Heather Webb
Genre: Historical Fiction
Publisher: Sonnet Press
Release Date: February 6, 2018
Pages: 342
Source: Netgalley/Publisher in exchange for an honest review
Synopsis: In this re-imagining of Phantom of the Opera, meet a Christine Daaé you’ve never seen before…

     Christine faces an impossible choice: be a star at the Paris opera as Papa always wanted, or follow her dream—to become a master of illusions. First, she must steal the secrets of the enigmatic master who haunts her, survive a world of treachery and murder, and embrace the uncertain promise of love. To succeed, she will risk her life in the grandest illusion of all.

     My Review: The Phantom’s Apprentice is a retelling of The Phantom of the Opera. Christine Daae has been singing in the salons of Paris with her father. However, she has always been fascinated with magic tricks and becoming a magician herself. When her father dies, Christine enters the Paris Opera House and becomes the understudy to the prima donna, Carlotta. She soon takes music lessons from a mysterious being known as the Angel of Music. When she learns that the Angel of Music has been terrorizing the Opera House in hopes to make her a star, Christine tries to break free of his hold and pursue a life of her own making.

     Being  a huge Phantom of the Opera fan, I was really excited to read this book, especially because the narrator is Christine Daae. Christine Daae has mostly been portrayed in popular culture as a passive, naive teenager. She is seen as a damsel in distress and is overshadowed by Raoul and the Phantom. Mrs. Webb’s novel promises a more assertive Christine who saves herself. However, after reading this, I came away feeling a little bit underwhelmed. Mrs. Webb’s Christine was not the Christine that was promised.

     Christine in this novel is still a bland and passive character. As I came away from this novel, I found her to be a bit distant. Christine still turns out to be a Mary Sue character. She does not have any flaws. She is still a superficial character. She is beautiful, intelligent, a good singer, and a good magician. She is not a fully fleshed out character. Therefore, there was not much of a personality to Christine. She was not an engaging character, and was very passive for the majority of the novel.

     Overall, this was not a bad retelling of Phantom of the Opera. It just did not meet my expectations. This is both because of the premise and the fact that Heather Webb is one of my favorite authors.  The characters are very stereotypical and not fully fleshed out. The pace of this story was slow for most of the novel. However, the climax was so rushed that if you weren’t paying attention, you’d miss it in the blink of an eye. Still, the writing was very evocative and lyrical. The setting of the Opera House was very atmospheric. Retellings are very hard to write, and Mrs. Webb just couldn’t pull it off. I recommend this for fans of Heather Webb and of historical fiction, but fans of Phantom of the Opera will come away feeling a little disappointed and would rather have wished to re-read the original novel instead.

Rating: 2½ out of 5 stars

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Iceberg by Jennifer A. Nielsen: A Book Review

  Iceberg Author: Jennifer A. Nielsen Genre: Children, Historical Fiction, Mystery, Adventure Publisher: Scholastic Release Date: March 7, 2023 Pages: 317 Source: My State Public Library Synopsis : As disaster looms on the horizon, a young stowaway onboard the Titanic will need all her courage and wits to stay alive. A thrilling tale from New York Times bestselling author Jennifer A. Nielsen!     Hazel Rothbury is traveling all alone from her home in England aboard the celebrated ship Titanic . Following the untimely death of her father, Hazel’s mother is sending her to the US to work in a factory, so that she might send money back home to help her family make ends meet.     But Hazel harbors a secret dream: She wants to be a journalist, and she just knows that if she can write and sell a story about the Titanic ’s maiden voyage, she could earn enough money to support her family and not have to go to a sweatshop. When Hazel discovers that m...

The Murderous Misses of Concord (Concord Mystery #1) by Elizabeth Dunne: A Book Review

The Murderous Misses of Concord (Concord Mystery #1) Author: Elizabeth Dunne Genre: Historical Fiction, Mystery & Suspense Publisher: Level Best - Historia Book Release Date: 2024 Pages: 258 Source: Netgalley/Publisher in exchange for an honest review. Synopsis: In Concord, Louisa May Alcott farms pigs after success with Little Women, but as New England's freezing winter approaches, death isn't far away. Concord's Misses, armed with wit and elegance, money and secrets, are present when Miss Emily Collier dies at her forty-second birthday party. Louisa is embroiled in the intrigue. They will lie to her, set traps, and blackmail to avoid justice. And Louisa is now an outsider in what was once her home. To test her mettle, local Justice of the Peace Captain Briers, a man compromised by lust for one of the Misses, enlists her to bring order to the twisted loyalties, land feuds, and secrets fuelling a seditious desire for revenge not seen in Middlesex County since the witch...

A Fortune Most Fatal (Miss Austen Investigates #2) by Jessica Bull: A Book Review

  A Fortune Most Fatal (Miss Austen Investigates #2) Author: Jessica Bull Genre: Historical Fiction, Mystery & Suspense Publisher: Union Square & Co. Book Release Date: 2025 Pages: 380 Source: Netgalley/Publisher in exchange for an honest review. Synopsis: A witty, engaging murder mystery featuring Jane Austen as an intrepid sleuth—the second installment in the Miss Austen Investigates series.         1797: A broken-hearted Jane Austen travels to Kent to look after her brother Neddy’s children and further her writing. She soon realizes it’s imperative she uncovers the true identity of a mysterious young woman claiming to be a shipwrecked foreign princess before the interloper can swindle Neddy’s adoptive mother out of her fortune and steal the much-anticipated inheritance all the Austens rely on.         My Review: A Fortune Most Fatal  is the sequel to The Hapless Milliner . Jane Austen’s he...