Posts Tagged: ARC

Thursday, June 05, 2014

Review & Giveaway: The Fever by Megan Abbott

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I received this book for free from Little Brown and Company in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

Review & Giveaway: The Fever by Megan AbbottThe Fever by Megan Abbott
Published by Little Brown and Company on June 17th 2014
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Mystery
Source: Little Brown and Company
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The panic unleashed by a mysterious contagion threatens the bonds of family and community in a seemingly idyllic suburban community.

The Nash family is close-knit. Tom is a popular teacher, father of two teens: Eli, a hockey star and girl magnet, and his sister Deenie, a diligent student. Their seeming stability, however, is thrown into chaos when Deenie's best friend is struck by a terrifying, unexplained seizure in class. Rumors of a hazardous outbreak spread through the family, school and community.

As hysteria and contagion swell, a series of tightly held secrets emerges, threatening to unravel friendships, families and the town's fragile idea of security.

A chilling story about guilt, family secrets and the lethal power of desire, The Fever affirms Megan Abbot's reputation as "one of the most exciting and original voices of her generation" (Laura Lippman).

Upon finishing The Fever I wasn’t really sure how I felt about it and to be honest I still don’t really know.  Usually when I write a review I go into having a general idea of what I want to say and I already have a good idea of what my rating will be.  Going into writing this review I am hoping that it will provide me with some clarity when it comes to my thoughts on the novel.

At the heart of my… indifference for the novel is the way in which it is told.  It’s a split POV tale that is told in the third person.  I always struggle when it comes to stories told in the third person, let alone when we have three different POVs in that vein.  I think that is why I felt very disconnected to The Fever.  I like novels that pull me into the world and make me feel like I am living everything that is going on and as if I am part of it all.  While reading Abbott’s story I felt very much like an outsider looking in.  I never felt the fear that the characters were feeling like I would have liked to, though I was enamoured in the mystery of it all. I was so unsure of what was happening to all the girls in the school because there were so many possibilities brought up.  Was it the result of a bad batch of HPV vaccines, or the murky/haunted lake water or did it have to do with sexual encounters that they had? All of these scenarios ran through my head and seemed perfectly plausible in the scope of the novel.  Things do take a drastic turn in the end which did manage to surprise me in a way that I hadn’t expected.

The three perspectives that we get here are of the members of the Nash family, Deenie, Eli and their father Tom.  The one thing that this split served well was its ability to show us what was happening from very different vantage points.  Deenie was best friends with patient zero, Lise and she is “in” with the girls that seem to be dropping like flies.  Eli is her older brother and he knows the girls in a different way, some he has had sexual encounters with and some have lusted for him from afar.  Lastly, with Tom, we see what’s going on in the teacher’s lounge and how the faculty & parents are dealing with this sudden illness that is going around.  I did like being able to gather information from 3 very different pools of people, it was like with every POV switch I was seeing things in an entirely different light.  One thing that remained a major theme in all 3 POVs was a pretty strong focus on female sexuality.  Deenie is just beginning to come into her sexuality, Eli is struggling with the part that he plays in young girls experimenting and even Tom notices things that he probably shouldn’t about the young girls that he sees.  Even though it was done in a very odd way, I think the novel had a very unique way of looking at and handling this subject and it left me with some pretty wild theories as to what was going on.

In the end I was left underwhelmed by the culmination of everything. As the reader I didn’t feel like I got all of the answers that I wanted and sometimes that can be a good thing but I think everything was left a little too open here.  Talking to a friend right after I read it we did come out of it with some pretty different interpretations of what happened (mine being admittedly much more far fetched than theirs.) So I guess the story lends to some good conversation to be had possibly making it a really good read for a book club.  I would say this book would be good for anyone looking for an engrossing mystery that also weaves in a unique perspective on what it is to be a girl in high school who is just coming into her sexuality.

three-stars
3 Hot Espressos


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Giveaway

Tandem Literary has generously offered a print copy of The Fever by Megan Abbott for giveaway.


  • Open to US addresses ONLY
  • Giveaway ends June 26th, 2014
  • Full contest terms and conditions found on Rafflecopter

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Review: The Truth About Alice by Jennifer Mathieu

Review: The Truth About Alice by Jennifer Mathieu

Posted by on 06/03/2014 • 19 Comments

A very important story told through several outer point of view that is ultimately about not believing everything you hear. The Truth About Alice takes on stereotypes and rumours and high school life in general, and unravels its layers to show the truth underneath. To show that not everything – or everyone – is as it seems. It’s pretty brilliant in that way: in its raw honesty, in its bluntness in showing us us how quickly and easily truths get distorted. And most importantly, how bullying is very real in all kinds of forms.

The Truth About Alice is narrated by several characters, not of the victim herself, which I find is part of the brilliance of this story. I initially feared four POVs would be overwhelming, but they are…

Review: The Vanishing Season by Jodi Lynn Anderson

Review: The Vanishing Season by Jodi Lynn Anderson

Posted by on 05/30/2014 • 8 Comments

I’m slowly learning that I am very picky when it comes to the type of “mindfuck-ey” books that I like. There are some that I love, that skyrocket to the very top of my favourite books list (like Another Little Piece, Lucid or Complicit to name a few) and then there are some that just never grab me and seem to almost go over my head. Falling into this group is books like (Don’t You) Forget About Me and now The Vanishing Season. There were definitely things that I appreciated in this novel but I never connected to it in any way nor did I come to care about the relationships.

Maggie’s family has had to downsize after her mother got laid off from her job in Chicago. They move…

Review: Complicit by Stephanie Kuehn

Review: Complicit by Stephanie Kuehn

Posted by on 05/29/2014 • 13 Comments

Complicit is exactly the kind of book I like to read, but have so much trouble finding. At the same time it is exactly the kind of book that I hate reviewing. Full of twists, turns and unreliable characters, this novel keeps you guessing until the very end and leaves you with a conclusion that will have your jaw on the floor.

Jamie Henry is 16 years old and he doesn’t know much about his past. He knows that he was adopted at a young age and that he was very lucky to have gotten to stay with his sister, Cate through all of that. He knows that his mother was shot and killed right in front of him and he knows that his sister is not stable nor is…

Review: Inland by Kat Rosenfield

Review: Inland by Kat Rosenfield

Posted by on 05/27/2014 • 10 Comments

Inland was a mixed bag for me. On one hand I love the cryptic nature of books like these where part of the fun is how it plays with our imagination, but for this to work I have to turn the last page with some kind of stunned wonderment, and that did not happen here. While the writing is great and the magical realism feel with its eerie mystique is initially intriguing, I ended up being quite bored for the most part, and eventually underwhelmed in the end. I was left disappointed with no more than what I felt after I read the synopsis. Also, that epilogue/ending kinda confused me – if anyone can shed a light on what the heck it meant that’d be great O_O

This is the…

Review: Torn Away by Jennifer Brown

Review: Torn Away by Jennifer Brown

Posted by on 05/21/2014 • 11 Comments

I grew up in a city where we had one devastating tornado in our history.  I’ve heard stories about the tornado of ’88 more times than I can count and I have always been fascinated by them.  After reading Torn Away I don’t think tornadoes are that cool anymore.  This novel brings to light the devastation that lays in their aftermath and shows you how people truly lose everything.  

Torn Away starts out with a bang.  We meet our MC Jersey as she is heading home from school on the day that a tornado rips through her community in the mid-western city of Elizabeth.  We see that she is frustrated with her little sister, Marin, and even annoyed at her mother as they head out to Marin’s…

Review: The Secrets of Lily Graves by Sarah Strohmeyer

Review: The Secrets of Lily Graves by Sarah Strohmeyer

Posted by on 05/15/2014 • 14 Comments

After having a long stint of bad luck when it came to murder mysteries The Secrets of Lily Graves came at me like a breath of fresh air. It’s engrossing, it’s twisty and it managed to take me completely by surprise.

Lily Graves hasn’t had the most traditional of upbringings. She’s been raised in a small home attached to her families business which just happens to be a funeral home. She’s grown up fascinated with the dead and has even worked on embalming bodies at a very young age. I loved how quirky and unconventional Lily was. She had a good sense of humour and she was really smart. Sure she got a little love sick over Matt (the boy she’s crushing on) but what teenaged girl doesn’t go…

Review: Everything Leads To You by Nina LaCour

Review: Everything Leads To You by Nina LaCour

Posted by on 05/14/2014 • 30 Comments

I feel like anything I want to say about this book has to be prefaced by me fangirling over the cover. Let’s all take a moment to stare at it and just take in it’s beauty *stares at cover* man, even the font treatment is so captivating! OK, now that that is out of the way, let’s talk about what’s inside. Nina LaCour’s Everything Leads To You is so much more than just a pretty cover. It’s a beautiful love story, it’s a magical tale that truly captures the essence of living in LA and it’s a story about strong relationships; ones you have had around forever and ones that you are just beginning to forge.

I literally just have a long list of things I loved about this book…