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THE GOD OF GOOD LOOKS by Breanne Mc Ivor

THE GOD OF GOOD LOOKS

by Breanne Mc Ivor

Pub Date: May 16th, 2023
ISBN: 9780063278813
Publisher: Morrow/HarperCollins

A young Trinidadian writer strikes back at the patriarchy with the help of a famous beauty entrepreneur.

Though it’s set in the world of the Caribbean beauty industry and its fascination with makeup might seem frivolous at first glance, Mc Ivor’s entertaining first novel is anything but skin deep. Under the glossy surface of this story about two skittish, driven people finding each other in complicated circumstances, this novel has bigger ambitions. Mc Ivor uses the beauty industry to explore the rifts created by poverty, sexism, and class in modern-day Trinidad, revealing how ingrained misogyny can be in a patriarchal society and how hard it can be to overcome. At the heart of the story is Bianca Bridge, a promising young writer who’s the daughter of a wealthy businessman. When her affair with a powerful married man becomes public, her reputation and hopes for success are crushed. She refuses to ask her father for help and works as a model to make ends meet though she hates the work. (She is, of course, conveniently beautiful.) Then makeup guru Obadiah Cortland hires her to work at his magazine. Obadiah is cold and supercilious, but his carefully cultivated public persona is a mask. Growing up in poverty, Obadiah has fought for everything he has, and to him, his success seems precarious. Still, he and Bianca and the magazine staff decide to make a powerful statement on crime and corruption in spite of the risk. The novel sputters on occasion—Bianca’s attempts to write fiction about her late mother are an unnecessary distraction, for example—but the irony of her needing her father’s support to carve a path for herself is not lost on the author. Mc Ivor’s ultimate message is clear: We all hide behind something, whether it’s makeup or privilege, and only by being true to ourselves can we triumph.

An entertaining novel that uses the beauty industry to examine issues of poverty, class, and sexism.