Slashed beauties

Allison Rushby

Book - 2025

"A gothic feminist body horror in two timelines revolving around three Anatomical Venuses-ultrarealistic wax figures of women-that come to life at night to murder men who have wronged them . . . Seoul, present day. Antiques dealer Alys's task is nearly complete. She has at last secured Elizabeth, the third and final Anatomical Venus. Crafted in eighteenth-century London and modeled after real-life sex workers to entice male medical students, these eerie wax figures, known as slashed beauties, carry unsavory lore. Legend has it that the figures are bewitched, and come to life at night to murder men who have wronged them. Now Alys embarks for England, where she knows what she must do: sever her cursed connection to the Venuses once ...and for all. London, 1763. Abandoned and penniless in Covent Garden, wide-eyed Eleanor and another young woman, Emily, are taken under the wing of beautiful and beguiling Elizabeth, one of the city's most highly desired courtesans among the rich and powerful. But as Eleanor is seduced deeper into a web of money, materialism, and men, it seems that Elizabeth may not be the savior she appears to be. As the timelines begin to intersect, it becomes clear that the women's stories are linked in deeper, darker ways than it initially seems. And that the only method for Alys to end the witchcraft that binds her legacy is to gather all three models in one place and destroy them. However, these haunted, murderous dolls might not be ready to burn."--

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1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Rushby Allison (NEW SHELF) Due Dec 2, 2025
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Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Middle grade author Rushby (The Wish Sisters) takes readers on a globe-trotting, timeline-straddling journey in her brisk and entertaining adult debut. In modern Seoul, Alys, an esoteric antiques dealer, is on a mission to destroy a triad of wax figurines of beautiful women rumored to come to life and murder misbehaving men. The tale then rewinds to flesh out the backstory of these statuettes. In 1769 London, Eleanor finds herself disgraced and abandoned by her new husband. Hopeless and in danger of starvation, she receives unexpected help from Elizabeth, a high-class courtesan with far-reaching influence and a dark past. Soon, Eleanor meets Emily, another young girl in Elizabeth's coterie. As Rushby pulls back the layers of Elizabeth's past, the fates of all three women become linked to the wax figurines and, in the present, Alys's mission becomes a race against time. Rushby's characters are richly realized, and she doesn't shy away from depicting the high risk of their lives as sex workers or society's cruelty and indifference toward women on the margins. Tense and fast-paced with refreshingly unique supernatural elements, this dark fantasy should win Rushby plenty of new fans. (Sept.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Cursed sex workers find love and seek vengeance. In 1769, 18-year-old Eleanor runs away to London with her boyfriend, Nicholas, assuming they'll marry. Instead, after two weeks of passion, Nicholas leaves their lodgings and doesn't return. Eleanor is searching for him at the Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens when the elegantly dressed Elizabeth suggests they have dinner. Over an array of delicacies, Eleanor tells Elizabeth her troubles, and "fallen woman" Elizabeth offers Eleanor employment. After having been "kept" for two years by a wealthy sea captain, Elizabeth is opening her own "genteel" establishment--"asérail, no less"--offering "entertainment and fine company." For half of what Eleanor earns "entertaining" rich men, Elizabeth will train, clothe, house, and feed her. Eleanor moves into Elizabeth's opulently furnished King Street rooms, where she meets and develops an immediate affection for fellow new hire Emily. Needing capital, Elizabeth negotiates payment for the three of them to serve as models for wax anatomical Venuses designed to entice medical students through a local anatomist's studio door. Meanwhile, in the present day, antiques dealer Alys acquires Elizabeth's wax form, having already secured Eleanor's and what remains of Emily's. Preternaturally captivating on their own, legend has it that when united, the three "slashed beauties" assume human form, hunting and killing "any man who has dared to look at them lustfully." Alys' family has a "long connection" with the Venuses, and she knows it's her destiny to destroy them; however, certain diabolical forces will do whatever it takes to stop her. The first-person, present-tense narration alternates between Eleanor and Alys, their stories informing each other while unfolding in tandem. Though the mechanics of the Venuses' dark magic are at times confusingly vague, Rushby's prose is lush and vivid, her characters are tragically complex, and Emily and Eleanor's mutual devotion proves the perfect foil for the macabre tale's more gruesome elements. Ferociously feminist body horror with a sentimental heart. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.