Reviews

Love Lies Beneath by Ellen Hopkins

kdurham2's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

Check out the full review at Kritters Ramblings

Before I dive into my review, I want to give a disclaimer. When I go into Ellen Hopkins books, I am excited to read outside the box and read a book made of poetry that is art and content and just awesome. I was sad when I opened this that there is minimal poetry sprinkled within the book. So warning.

From the beginning of the book, the reader is swept into Tara's life. It is a little rough from the start but finally gets into a swing and you go from her being crazy and single to starting to get tied down. After an injury sidelines her and really brings her to her knees, she has to start relying on others and you really see her shift. I liked watching that change in the character. Cavin Lattimore the doctor that walks into her life after her injury was interesting, with the addition of his teenage son, the reader has to pick on each page who to trust and it bounces back and forth. There were times where I was excited that I had to decide who to trust and then there were moments where it got exhausting.

bmg20's review against another edition

Go to review page

1.0

Warning: Spoilers ahead.

I don’t even know where to begin with this epic disaster. I’m just as shocked as you are… Ellen Hopkins! One of my all-time favorites! The one I’ve always been able to rely on for a beautifully written story with a moving plot. Love Lies Beneath was nothing like I’ve come to expect from Hopkins and while change isn’t necessarily a bad thing in this case she strayed from her verse style and opted for a typical style of writing and it was a major fail. I can’t even soften this (or shorten my rant) so I don’t come off as a complete asshole because I am completely shocked at how straight up horrible this was. Me. Rating an Ellen Hopkins 1 star. Hell hath frozen over.



First off, I need to mention that I read the short story that is listed as a prequel story called [b:On the Rocks|25647256|On the Rocks|Ellen Hopkins|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1433214749s/25647256.jpg|45466406]. I’m all for anything that adds a new level of understanding and from what other reviewers said, reading it before Love helped you to understand Tara and Graham’s relationship better. (cue insane laughter) I have to basically spoil the short story in order to properly explain the beginning of my aggravations, so you’ve been warned.

Tara is introduced as a powerful, self-sufficient woman who is also a recent widow. She takes what she wants, in life and in the bedroom, and has no qualms about doing so. Graham meets twenty-three year old Tara for the first time in a local pawnshop, which she’s owner. He’s been seeing this other girl recently, but he thinks Tara is really something so he calls her a few days later to ask her out on a date. They hit it off, end up in bed together, and in the morning he leaves to go meet his girlfriend for lunch. Yeah, he’s a real charmer. Long story short, his girlfriend’s sister is meeting them and go figure, Tara is the sister that shows up. Talk about awkward. The aggravations began when I picked up Love and noted some SERIOUS inconsistencies.

When Love opens, there’s a serious jump in time. Tara is now forty and is now a three-time divorceé who spends her time in the gym or working on fundraising. One of her exes is a politician who takes care of all her expenses still so she doesn’t have to do any real work. Graham ended up married to her sister and they have three children together. Tara and Graham hate each other and the short story was supposed to be the key to explaining it all. But that’s where I ran into a major snag:

‘…would it have been better to confide the fact that Graham had tried to sleep with me?’

Wait. TRIED to sleep with her? Correct me if I’m wrong, but I thought it was pretty clear in the short story they slept together.

‘They fuck for hours, until there’s nothing left to fuck away-no loneliness, no frustration, no pain, no thirst.’

Uh, yeah. I don’t think that could be any more clear. Yet I believe I counted at least three instances which mentioned how he hates her because she “turned him down”… TWENTY YEARS AGO. Because that makes complete sense for him to hate her after that long and after marrying her sister and having kids together for him to still hold a grudge for all that. Even if the story upheld the short stories claim that they slept together, it still wouldn’t be realistic for him to hate her after all that time.

Alright, so on to my next issue. Tara. Tara is not a character you will grow fond of. I’ve read my fair share of unlikable characters and this alone won’t bring a story down for me. What brought it down is Tara is a total cliché and could not be more of a cardboard cutout. Her narrative is ridiculous and uninspiring and the motivations behind her mannerisms are chalked up to an absent mother that slept around with a bunch of men. But the things that would come out of her mouth were straight-up cringe worthy. Here are a few treasures I saved:

“No. You broke even, minus the three hundred you gave away. You could have lost the whole thing! Who does that? Who takes that kind of risk?
She is seriously clueless. “It’s only money, Mel.”


“Kayla’s been heading in the wrong direction for a while now. I’m afraid she’s lost all sense of reason.”
I’ve heard marijuana can do that to a person, and what if it’s become a gateway to harder stuff?


‘I’ve relied on condoms for intermittent liaisons, and remained herpes and fetus-free. Should I worry now? At my age, is what’s left of my egg stash even viable?
Oh well, if things go wrong, there’s always abortion.’


And my favorite:

‘The burgers, at least, don’t disappoint, and the fries are worth every fat-soaked bite. Good thing I didn’t eat earlier.’

Yeah, she’s a fabulous person. But she’s just so terribly written that she comes off as laughable and I’m not sure that’s what was intended. Speaking of the writing, compared to her more lush verse stories, this reads like somebody completely different wrote it. It’s oversimplified and the supposed “mystery” is something that’s thrown in for a half-assed twist at the end which made it all the more ludicrous. In addition to changing her writing style, she added in a whole lot more sex scenes than I had seen before from her, even in her other adult novels. Suffice it to say that I found them laughable as well and I’m certain that’s definitely not what she intended.

But personally, I want to lick him, forehead to foreskin. Hmm. Does he have foreskin? Damn, now I’m wondering.



Then I unhinge my jaw, which is what it takes for my mouth to accept the whole thing, and I teach him the meaning of head, Tara-style […]

I’m not sure when but she apparently transformed into a snake at some point. I missed that scene.

And this completely creepy mental image:

Completely engorged, his cock crawls up the backs of my legs.

Um. Cocks don’t do that. Maybe he should have that looked at.

And if all that wasn’t bad enough, towards the end she has this medical crisis and was a complete idiot about it. She had a reaction to something she ate and had to use her epi pen and considering I personally have to carry an epi pen and know exactly how all that shit goes, the scene was completely enraging. She describes injecting herself and how the swelling in her eyes and face as well as the hives began to immediately shrink. And how she went to the bathroom to look at herself in the mirror, noted that her skin was slack from being all stretched out so she applied some tightening lotion. Uh, that’s not how that works, at fucking all. Your swelling doesn’t go away that quickly. But the icing on the fucking cake:

‘All the literature says to call 911 or go into the ER after an episode capped with epinephrine. But I want to go to the beach.’



And I’m done. I’m baffled. So completely shocked. I can’t even comprehend.



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

modest_mercedes's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

Pretty enticing read all the way through. Did not have a definitive ending, but after re-reading the last paragraph or two I realized it was enough. Makes you really think back and notice things throughout the story that you didn't really piece together before.

minseigle's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

It's very possible that I would've rated this book at a 3 or 3.5. It was an interesting read and I was anxious to find out what would happen......BUT then I got to the second-to-last page and that rating got bumped up to a 4 or 4.25. I had to re-read parts there at the end. Shocking! Intriguing! Excellent conclusion!

booksandladders's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Disclaimer: I received a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

This review was originally posted on Books and Ladders

I am a huge fan of Ellen Hopkins, so of course I jumped at the chance to read and review her newest adult fiction novel! I wasn't too sure about the idea of prose over poetry, but I do think that it was still laid out in a good, Hopkins style.

But this wasn't great, it was good. I was expecting a thriller with a lot of who to trust, who not to trust, and being on the edge of my seat the entire time. But that isn't what I got. It fell kind of flat some times and the ending was a little unsatisfying. I thought there were some loose ends and unanswered questions, but since this is a series I am sure there is more to come that will explain this.

Eli, though, he was my favorite character. I loved not knowing whether to trust him or not, let alone his intentions. He was probably the best character overall. I am thinking that maybe this will be like Triangle and Tilt with one book from the parent's perspective and then one from the child's.

The ending was unfulfilling. I thought there was too much build up for what the result was.

Overall: 3.5/5 stars for this one. I hope the rest of the series has more to it than this one did!

karmen12's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

The ending was interesting. I almost never think this, but I feel like if this was a movie, it might be better.

lauraloudmouth's review against another edition

Go to review page

dark mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.0

sonia_reppe's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Tara, a smart, beautiful socialite, has never been in love, but she has been married three times. From stripper to trophy wife, Tara knows how to work things to her advantage, so now in her early 40s, single again, she is set for life--except for the love thing. Then she meets a handsome, charming surgeon when she breaks her knee skiing. Problems arise with the doctor's teenage son, and also her sister' marriage is falling apart, and someone--an ex? is sending threatening messages.

I loved being in Tara's word of money and having an adoring suitor and falling in love for a first time. Tara has grace under pressure and a salty tongue. Plenty of sexy-time scenes. I don't know why this doesn't have wider readership. I think fans of Danielle Steel and Elin Hildebrand would like it if they don't mind all the sex, which was fun.

nicolesbundleofbooks's review against another edition

Go to review page

2.0

I am the biggest Ellen Hopkins fan. I own all her books and intend to keep buying them but this book was not her best by any means. I had high hopes for her trying the traditional writing style but she needs to go back to her poem form. That's why people like her, because she is different. The info that is give on the cover makes this book to sound like it will be a thriller. It was anything but that. She had a lot to work with and just let it all die. The ending was the worst part. It was like she go to a set amount of pages then gave up. She needs to stick with what she knows (sex, drugs, teens, abuse) not suspense.

jadie205's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

It took me a minute to get interested in this book. Definitely not what I was expecting from Ellen Hopkins but to me it was a good read other then the ending was horrible! I kind of hope she writes a sequel to it because I feel like I was left hanging. I will always be a die hard fan of Ellen Hopkins and think that this book should be rated more highly!