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I just finished the book and i don’t even know where to start.
First and foremost, i loved this book. I think the only reason it isn’t a 5 stars is because of the epilogue. Had the book ended before it we would have been subjected to our own imagination to create what the sisters did
But i feel like the epilogue have a sense of closure, and happiness that wasn’t needed. It finished almost too neatly after everything we learn about the family, the sisters, and their personalities.
Although this book was a medium read for me, it is centered on a short amount of time. It seems like a lot happens, because you can see how everything unravels for each character, and yet i didn’t feel suffocated by the character development. It was just the right amount of info for me to build the story in my head and follow along.
I loved the writing, it went from elaborated, to simple, from serious, to lighthearted, all while dealing with heavy topics of addictions, childhood trauma, and death. It felt like reading a page of a diary at times, which was strange yet comforting.
I think Coco Mellors did such a beautiful job with this story, and i cannot wait to dig into C&F as soon as I’ve digested this one fully!
Graphic: Addiction, Alcoholism, Death, Drug abuse, Toxic relationship
Minor: Infidelity, Vomit
Graphic: Addiction, Alcoholism, Drug abuse, Emotional abuse, Vomit, Grief, Alcohol
Moderate: Chronic illness, Death, Suicidal thoughts, Abandonment
Graphic: Addiction, Alcoholism, Death, Drug abuse, Drug use, Violence, Grief, Death of parent, Alcohol
I can’t really understand any of the sisters- self-sabotaging (so exasperating), passive, childish, selfish. They didn’t really interact much with each other, spending each of their respective chapter perspectives mostly separately in their own lives. With addiction plaguing the Blue family in different ways, I’d also expected a fuller picture of its ability for destruction. Surprisingly addiction is talked about in practical terms like AA meetings and waking up disorientated and confused, but never really explored in depth- a couple paragraphs on the effects of an absent explosive father and a sister’s denial of being an addict.
Although I think there’s nothing life-changing or powerful about the story or message, the characterisation and first-person narratives are immersive and painfully familiar, the prose very compelling and beautiful. There is a lot of grief wrought in the characters and a lot of love, Mellors writing emotionally and intimately to our desires and fears- love and loneliness… and who’s not a sucker for a book about that😔
Graphic: Addiction, Alcoholism, Death, Drug abuse
Graphic: Addiction, Alcoholism, Drug abuse, Grief
Moderate: Death, Sexual assault
The sisters make questionable throughout the book which many readers will not like or resonate with, but we get an honest view into their flawed sisterhood. Since this is written in multiple POVs, I connected with some characters more than others, but there's no doubt Coco Mellors can write. A wonderfully written sophomore novel that makes me more excited to pick up her debut which is currently sitting on my shelf.
Thank you NetGalley for an early advanced copy!
Graphic: Addiction, Alcoholism, Death, Drug abuse, Drug use
Moderate: Sexual content
Minor: Rape
Graphic: Addiction, Alcoholism, Chronic illness, Death, Drug abuse, Drug use, Infidelity, Mental illness, Grief, Alcohol
Minor: Miscarriage
I really loved this book. I’m endlessly impressed by the way in which Mellors slips between character POVs in such a realistic way, with every character feeling distinctive and the book still flowing beautifully.
This book looks at grief, addiction and family in such a raw, honest way and I adored it. The characters are often times dislikable but not to the extent where I did not care about them. I am thoroughly impressed and definitely will be giving Coco Mellors future work a read!
Thank you to Harper Collins and Netgalley for providing me an ARC of this book. I am under no obligation to post this review and all thoughts are my own.
Graphic: Infidelity
Moderate: Addiction, Death, Drug abuse, Drug use
Minor: Domestic abuse
There are some very good scenes and moments though, but some were also repetitive (why talk about the same memories from the different pov if it's not to tell anything new?
Also :
Graphic: Addiction, Alcoholism, Chronic illness, Death, Drug use, Infidelity, Suicidal thoughts, Grief
Moderate: Sexual assault
This is the story of the four Blue sisters: Avery (the gay one) who is a lawyer living in London, Bonnie (the scary one) who is a boxer turned bouncer living in LA, Lucky (the hot one) who is a model living in Paris and Nicky (the dead one) who was a teacher living in New York. They have awful parents (alcoholic father, cold mother) and display a lot of self-destructive behaviour, including but not limited to alcoholism, drug abuse and infidelity. They also constantly fight with each other. Honestly, if you needed a guide book on how to fuck up your life, these people could write it no problem. Lucky's posh drug-fuelled party is so distasteful I skipped a few pages.
I get it, the death of their sister Nicky at 27 from an overdose of pain medication (she suffered from debilitating endometriosis), leaves a hole in their lives they struggle to come to terms with but I simply couldn't connect with these well-to-do women who willingly burn down their lives at every turn while using words like "lycanthropic" and "prurience". Just go have therapy already!
It is well-written literature, but it's not for me. Too much misery and unhappiness in a book, combined with chapters that are ten miles long, makes me lose the will to live.
“Lucky,” said Lucky. “That’s a funny name,” said Flopsy. Lucky gave her a sideways look."
Graphic: Addiction, Alcoholism, Chronic illness, Drug abuse, Drug use, Sexual content, Grief, Alcohol
Moderate: Death, Infidelity, Suicidal thoughts, Vomit, Sexual harassment
Minor: Rape