I think the main issue I had with this book is that
the hype was so strong, and it was compared so much to Gone Girl by Gillian
Flynn, that it raised my expectations way too much. Don’t get me wrong, this
book was good, just not that good.
I love unreliable narrators and in this novel we get
two of them. That is my favorite thing about this novel, how some crucial facts
are casually mentioned by one character or another, letting us put things
together little by little. Unfortunately, some of the actual writing can be
clunky, with too much telling for my taste. There are pages and pages of the
author just telling us events instead of letting us see them through a
character’s eyes, which slows the book
down.
Apart from that, the last half of the book doesn’t
make too much logical sense, I don’t want to give anything away, but I’m not
sure what part two is even doing in the novel. I understand the author needed
to tie up some loose ends, but an entire second section is not necessary.
I felt the book had some potential, especially in
the way the author handled some of the psychological aspects, but it didn’t
quite get there for me.
1 comment:
Darn, I have this one on audio and wonder if I even want to start it.
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