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Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt Review: Warmhearted Mystery With an Unforgettable Octopus

Shelby Van Pelt's debut novel pairs a grieving widow with a philosophically-minded giant Pacific octopus to unravel a decades-old disappearance — a New York Times bestseller that won the 2023 McLaughlin-Esstman-Stearns First Novel Prize and is now in development as a Netflix adaptation starring Sally Field.

LuvemBooks Verdict

Best for

Readers who prize emotional warmth over plot mechanics — particularly those drawn to multigenerational stories of grief and quiet reconnection, fans of Fredrik Backman's character-driven architecture, and anyone ready to embrace a sardonic octopus as a genuine narrative voice.

Worth it if

The emotional mechanics of A Man Called Ove resonate with you, because Van Pelt occupies the same territory: loneliness, unlikely connection, and an earned sentimental payoff anchored by a protagonist whose grief is rendered with evident care.

Skip if

You're arriving for a tightly plotted mystery with a genuinely withheld resolution — the central revelation is disclosed by Marcellus well before the final pages, and the novel's greatest strengths are atmospheric and emotional rather than structural.

Kirkus Reviews describes it as "a charming, warmhearted read" that maintains "a light and often warmly humorous tone" even as its characters grapple with loss, grief, and aging. Readers at bookclubchat.com called it "one of those stories that lived up to the hype and more," praising the way Van Pelt gives her protagonist a new opportunity for happiness as "quite beautiful," while ivereadthis.com noted it is "perfect for fans of Fredrik Backman" but observed that the mystery "doesn't take too much brainpower to solve" and suggested the book "sounds as if it was written to please a writers' group and with more than one eye on a sale to television."

A debut novel about a woman who befriends an octopus is a charming, warmhearted read.

Kirkus Reviews
Sources: Kirkus Reviews, ivereadthis.com, bookclubchat.com, onereadingnurse.com
4.6from 154,113 Amazon ratings— reader ratings, not a LuvemBooks score
In This Review
  • What Works & What Doesn't
  • What the Novel Is and What It Sets in Motion
  • Significance and Reception
  • Strengths: Character, Warmth, and the Marcellus Factor
  • Genuine Limitations
  • Who This Book Is For

What Works & What Doesn't

What Works
  • Won the 2023 McLaughlin-Esstman-Stearns First Novel Prize and became a New York Times bestseller — strong debut credentials
  • Marcellus the octopus is praised by multiple named authors as one of fiction's most original and satisfying characters
  • Blends warmth with genuine emotional depth, striking what Barnes & Noble calls a 'deceptively sensitive' balance
  • Drew comparisons to Fredrik Backman for its character-driven storytelling and earned emotional payoffs
  • A Netflix adaptation starring Sally Field signals exceptionally broad readership appeal for a debut novel
What Doesn't
  • The central mystery is resolved relatively early by Marcellus, meaning the final act shifts to emotional fallout rather than plot revelation — readers seeking sustained suspense may feel short-changed
  • Marcellus's capacity to read human desires beyond his tank stretches the novel's internal logic, which one reader described as requiring suspension of disbelief even on its own terms
Remarkably Bright Creatures is a charming, character-driven debut that uses an unlikely friendship between a lonely widow and a captive octopus to excavate grief, family secrets, and the possibility of hope — reviewed here on the basis of the book's contents and published reception, not hands-on reading.
Remarkably Bright Creatures: A Novel_main_0

What the Novel Is and What It Sets in Motion

At its centre are two narrators with very different perspectives. Tova Sullivan is a recently widowed woman in her seventies who takes a night-shift cleaning job at the Sowell Bay Aquarium and gradually forms a bond with Marcellus, the resident giant Pacific octopus. Marcellus, ancient and sardonic, observes the humans around his tank with a patience and intelligence that the novel frames as entirely genuine. Threading through their growing friendship is the unresolved mystery of Tova's son Erik, who disappeared thirty years earlier under circumstances that have never been fully explained. Into this arrangement arrives Cameron Cassmore, a luckless thirty-year-old teetering on the edge of financial ruin who is also described as possessing a remarkable intellect — and who carries a connection to Tova's past she has yet to discover. The publisher describes the novel as "a gentle reminder that sometimes taking a hard look at the past can help uncover a future that once felt impossible."
a gentle reminder that sometimes taking a hard look at the past can help uncover a future that once felt impossible.

Significance and Reception

Originally published in May 2022 by Ecco Press, Remarkably Bright Creatures became a New York Times bestseller and a Read With Jenna selection, and it was awarded the 2023 McLaughlin-Esstman-Stearns First Novel Prize by the Writer's Center — a notable achievement for a debut. Its cultural reach extended further when Variety and The Hollywood Reporter both reported in August 2024 that a Netflix adaptation was in development, directed by Olivia Newman (Where the Crawdads Sing) and starring Sally Field. That level of attention for a first novel signals an unusually wide readership.

Strengths: Character, Warmth, and the Marcellus Factor

Critical praise has centred heavily on the character of Marcellus himself. Cynthia D'Aprix Sweeney, author of The Nest, called him "one of the most intriguing and satisfying characters I've encountered in fiction in a very long time," and described the novel as managing to be "wry and wise, charming and surprising." Jamie Ford, the New York Times bestselling author of Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, praised Van Pelt for creating "a perfect story with imperfect characters" that is "so heartwarming, so mysterious, and so completely absorbing." The Barnes & Noble editorial description frames it as "an ultimately feelgood but deceptively sensitive debut" — noting the balance between lightness and emotional depth. Blurbers and booksellers alike have drawn comparisons to Fredrik Backman, pointing to the novel's character-driven architecture and its reliance on personality quirks, accumulated hurt, and earned emotional payoff.

Genuine Limitations

Not all readers find the construction seamless. One reader at ivereadthis.com observed that the mystery at the novel's heart "doesn't take too much brainpower to solve," with the key revelation disclosed by Marcellus well before the final pages, shifting the reader's attention from plot surprise to emotional aftermath. The same reviewer noted that Marcellus's ability to intuit the needs and desires of humans beyond his tank stretches credulity even within the novel's own logic, and offered the pointed observation that the book "sounds as if it was written to please a writers' group and with more than one eye on a sale to television." Readers who arrive expecting a tightly plotted mystery with a genuinely withheld resolution may find the pacing of discovery front-loaded. The novel's greatest strengths are atmospheric and emotional rather than structural.

Who This Book Is For

Remarkably Bright Creatures is designed for readers who prize feeling over puzzle-solving — those who are drawn to multigenerational stories of loss and quiet reconnection, and who can embrace a non-human narrator without irony. The Backman comparison is a useful shorthand: if the emotional mechanics of A Man Called Ove resonate, Van Pelt's novel occupies similar territory. It is a book about loneliness and the unlikely forms that connection can take, anchored by a protagonist in Tova whose grief is rendered with evident care, and by an octopus whose interiority Van Pelt uses to illuminate the human figures around him. The 2025 reissue from Ecco — available in paperback — brings the novel to new readers ahead of its Netflix adaptation, making this an apt moment to encounter it for the first time.

Sources & Further Reading

The key facts and claims in this review are grounded in the retrieved, verified sources listed below.

  1. Cited in this review
  2. 1
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  4. Further reading
  5. 3

    Shelby Van Pelt, Wikipedia