Beautiful Ugly

Beautiful Ugly
Book cover
AuthorAlice Feeney
Audio read byRichard Armitage
LanguageEnglish
GenrePsychological thriller
Set inScotland
PublisherFlatiron Books
Publication date
2025
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Pages320
ISBN9781250337788

Beautiful Ugly is a 2025 psychological thriller novel by Alice Feeney. The book follows Grady Green, a once-successful author who retreats to a remote Scottish island after his wife Abby's disappearance, only to encounter unsettling events and a woman who looks exactly like his missing wife.

Plot

Thriller author Grady Green is married to Abby, an investigative journalist. While driving home, Abby stops after seeing a person lying in the road. She exits the car to help the person, but disappears; Grady finds her car still running and abandoned.

One year later, Abby is still missing. Grady's literary agent (and Abby's godmother) Kitty Goldman suggests he get over his writer's block by visiting Amberly, a remote Scottish isle home to 25 people. She gives him the keys to a cabin she inherited from Charles Whittaker, a famous author who wrote several books on Amberly before his death.

With his Labrador retriever Columbo, Grady travels from London to Amberly and meets Sandy MacIntyre, the ferry captain and island sheriff. Under the cabin's floorboards, Grady discovers an unpublished manuscript by Charles Whittaker, as well as the bones of a human hand. Grady secretly reworks the manuscript and sends it to Kitty. He also tells Sandy about the bones, which have vanished when they look again.

Other strange happenings disturb Grady's stay. Although Amberly reportedly has no telephone service, Grady answers an incoming call to the island's phone booth and hears Abby's voice. An unknown person leaves a series of Abby's newspaper articles in the cabin. Grady also repeatedly sees a woman in a red coat who resembles Abby.

Grady learns that Charles was friends with Sandy, who read all of his novels' first drafts. Worried that Sandy will discover his theft of Charles' manuscript, Grady finds her mourning in a dangerous seaside cave where her daughter and other children were once swept away at high tide. Sandy, inebriated, tells him that she was the only person to read the unpublished manuscript, and Grady leaves her to die.

Returning from the cave, Grady encounters the woman in the red coat, who looks just like Abby but has brown eyes instead of blue. She introduces herself as Aubrey and seems not to recognize Grady; he is shocked to learn that she is married to a woman and has a baby girl.

As his mental health worsens, Grady attempts to leave Amberly, but the ferry is not running due to Sandy's disappearance. Inside the island's church, Grady finds Sandy alive as well as Abby, who disguised herself as "Aubrey" using contact lenses. Abby reveals that she lived on Amberly as a child and was the only survivor of the mass drowning; the other children followed her to the cave after she ran away from a teacher who tried to sexually assault her.

It is revealed that Grady was responsible for Abby's disappearance, lying in the road in an attempt to kill her. The couple had fought about whether to have children, and Grady secretly had a vasectomy while Abby secretly used in vitro fertilisation. After finding Abby's positive pregnancy test, Grady believed she was cheating on him. Abby narrowly survived the attack and fled to Amberly.

At the cabin, Grady finds Kitty, who was married to Charles Whittaker and whose real name is also Abby; her best friend and Abby's mother named her daughter after her. Flashback chapters in which "Abby" recounts her marital troubles with her writer husband are actually from Kitty's perspective. Kitty was born on Amberly, and Abby came to live with Kitty and Charles on the island after Abby's mother committed suicide.

Grady also learns that the bones were from the man who tried to assault Abby; he had previously assaulted Kitty, and Kitty's mother severed his hand with an axe. After the children drowned, Sandy killed the man while the other male residents were gradually eliminated through attrition. Amberly has become a refuge for its all-female population, including several women mentioned in Abby's articles.

When Charles—whose books supported Amberly financially—discovered the plan to replace the island's men, he stopped writing and eventually hanged himself in the cabin. Kitty now gives Grady an ultimatum: continue writing to generate income for Amberly, or be killed. A year later, Grady's latest novel Beautiful Ugly is a bestseller; he has hidden a secret message in the book that he is trapped on the island. Grady wakes up in a coffin and finds that he has been buried alive.

Background

According to Feeney, Beautiful Ugly was inspired by a trip she took to Scotland in which she was temporarily stranded in the Outer Hebrides.[1]

Reception

Beautiful Ugly spent two weeks on the New York Times Best Seller list in the "Hardcover Fiction" category.[2] Sarah Lyall, in the Times, called the book one of January 2025's "most exciting" thriller releases that "branches into unexpected directions on multiple fronts".[3] The Guardian's Alison Flood said that Beautiful Ugly was "packed with twists that I didn’t even guess at" and "maybe a little overblown but an enjoyable ride to a brilliantly dark ending."[4]

Stuart Kelly of The Scotsman wrote that Beautiful Ugly was a "perfectly serviceable product", though he complained that the plot was "eminently guessable along the lines of being the only possible solution, if temple-grindingly unbelievable."[5] Kathryne Cardwell, in the Winnipeg Free Press, said the story had a "hurried, awkward feel" with "too many" twists.[6] Publishers Weekly called the novel a "letdown" with "flat descriptions" and "flatter characters", adding that Feeney's "trademark twists are more far-fetched than ever."[7]

Adaptation

Todd Lieberman's production company Hidden Pictures acquired the rights to Beautiful Ugly in January 2025, with plans to adapt the book for film.[8]

References

  1. ^ Reed, Conner (November 22, 2024). "Alice Feeney Knows What Lies Beneath". Publishers Weekly. Archived from the original on April 18, 2025. Retrieved April 18, 2025.
  2. ^ "Hardcover Fiction Books - Best Sellers - Books - Feb. 9, 2025". The New York Times. February 9, 2025. Archived from the original on April 18, 2025. Retrieved April 18, 2025.
  3. ^ Lyall, Sarah (January 11, 2025). "3 New Thrillers Fueled by Obsession and Blackmail". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 11, 2025. Retrieved April 18, 2025.
  4. ^ Flood, Alison (January 21, 2025). "Crime and thrillers of the month – review". The Guardian. Archived from the original on January 21, 2025. Retrieved April 18, 2025.
  5. ^ Kelly, Stuart (February 26, 2025). "Book reviews: One Came Back by Rose McDonagh | Beautiful Ugly by Alice Feeney". The Scotsman. Archived from the original on February 27, 2025. Retrieved April 18, 2025.
  6. ^ Cardwell, Kathryne (February 22, 2025). "Missing-wife mystery offers too many twists". Winnipeg Free Press. Archived from the original on April 18, 2025. Retrieved April 18, 2025.
  7. ^ "Beautiful Ugly". Publishers Weekly. Archived from the original on April 18, 2025. Retrieved April 18, 2025.
  8. ^ Rubin, Rebecca (January 28, 2025). "Alice Feeney's Best-Seller 'Beautiful Ugly' Sets Film Adaptation (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety. Archived from the original on April 18, 2025. Retrieved April 18, 2025.