Reviews

Daughter of Deep Silence by Carrie Ryan

carleighdipasquale's review against another edition

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2.0

I have to admit, I'm disappointed with this book. I really wanted to love this, I really, really did, but overall the novel was just meh for me. The biggest problem I had with Daughter of Deep Silence was the protagonist, Frances. I feel her character got worse and worse as the story went on. Sure, she was going to be pretty messed up mentally after the shipwreck of the Persephone where she lost her parents, but Frances took mentally unstable to another unneeded level! She is extremely self-centered, and she did things that she knew her parents and Libby wouldn't approve of, yet she was still reckless. Also, if France's was so focused on getting revenge, she probably would not have fallen in love with her so called "enemy". I mean, come on! Who thinks its completely stupid to lust after a boy who you are trying to get revenge on? Me! The whole problem could have been resolved within the first 200 pages or so. Why couldn't France's just go to the police and detective Morales? The book was a waste of time.

Don't even get me started on the ending! This book is pitched as a revenge thriller yet she doesn't even get revenge on the Senator and his son for the Persephone shipwreck! The ending just proved to me how much Frances is coward. Not only does she disguise herself as her best friend for 4 years, insulting Libby with her actions, but she runs away!!! Will the world ever know the actual truth?

I also really hated the writing. I found that the sentences never flowed together nicely, that the writing was really sloppy.

I can't say I'd recommend this, to any one, ever.:(

marieintheraw's review against another edition

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3.0

I was hoping for more revenge and less romance.

ladytiara's review against another edition

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4.0

Do you like old school soap opera plots? Or the show Revenge? Then Daughter of Deep Silence may be the book for you. It's the perfect summer beach read: a fast-paced page-turner about a young woman bent on revenge.

While on a cruise with her parents, 14-year-old Frances makes a new friend, Libby, and falls in love with a boy named Gray. What seems like an idyllic vacation turns into a nightmare when armed men storm the ship, kill the passengers, and sink the ship. Frances and Libby escape in a raft, but only Frances survives the week they spend in open water. When Frances is rescued, she learns that Gray and his father, a U.S. Senator, also survived the event, and they're claiming the ship went down because of a rogue wave. At the request of Libby's grieving father, Frances agrees to take on Libby's identity. Four years later, Libby/Frances goes to Libby's father's vacation home on an island in South Carolina to start her revenge plot against Gray and his father.

I read this book because I liked the author's Forest of Hands and Teeth zombie series, and although Daughter of Deep Silence is quite different, it's just as compelling as the zombie books. This book has many of the soap opera tropes that make the genre both ludicrous and awesome: a secret identity, a revenge plot, a creepy villain, and a Romeo/Juliet style forbidden romance. Yes, you'll have to suspend your disbelief quite a bit, but if you can get past that, Daughter of Deep Silence is a highly entertaining read. Beyond all the soapy goodness, it delves into some interesting ideas about identity. Frances leaves her old identity behind to become Libby, and she's done a pretty good job of pushing her own past away and making herself into her friend, but when she sees Gray again, it becomes harder to keep the Frances side of her personality under wraps. She's not Frances anymore, nor is she fully Libby.

Be warned: you may want to block out some uninterrupted time for this book. You won't want to be interrupted once you start it.

I received an ARC from Amazon Vine.

samrushingbooks's review against another edition

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4.0

Over all probably a 4.5 star.

Review to come later.

eulsie's review against another edition

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4.0

It was pretty good! I wish we could have gotten more insight into Grey's head. Poor guy. Not my favorite... but dang-- Frances was really interesting- and vengeful.

thestoryowl's review against another edition

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3.0

Felt like the show Revenge but for YAs. I liked how Frances wasn't overly villianized or glorified, just presented as a girl who was warped by the tragedies in her life. I also liked that the ending wasn't all "redemption and rainbows".

thewillisway's review against another edition

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4.0

I hated the main character but loved the concept! This book will have you conflicted but overall I enjoyed it.

nicolemhewitt's review against another edition

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5.0

4.5/5 Stars

This review and many more can be found on my blog: Feed Your Fiction Addiction

I honestly didn't know what to expect with this book. The cover made it almost look like a fantasy to me, but the blurb made it relatively obvious that it wasn't. I'm not much for suspense, and I didn't know if this book would venture too far into that territory for me to love it. Still, I was definitely intrigued ...

Well, it turns out, I loved this book!!

The book starts out with Frances being rescued after being adrift at sea for over a week. She and her friend Libby escaped their cruise shop when all of its inhabitants were brutally murdered, but unfortunately, Libby wasn't able to last long enough to be rescued. When Libby's father finds out what happened and that the murders are being covered up, he comes up with a plan - have Frances pretend to be Libby so that he can protect her. Frances is now an orphan with seemingly nothing in life to go back to, so she agrees. But she spends the next four years plotting how she can discover the secrets of why everyone on the ship was murdered and expose the truth.

What I loved:

Shipwreck!
Okay, I was pretty much fascinated by this book from the get-go. Ryan did a fabulous job with the mystery, giving you more and more details of what happened on the ship the night it was attacked and what happened to Libby and Frances as the book went on. I savored each piece of information as it was unfurled! Plus, it's a shipwreck - those are just inherently interesting, as far as I'm concerned.

Inner turmoil.
Yes, there was suspense and mystery to this book, but I would actually say that it was mostly about Frances's struggle to come to terms with everything that had happened to her. The tragedy of watching her parents (and others) being killed and watching her best friend die followed her throughout her life, and she simply could not let these things go. The attack haunted her and her quest for revenge took over her life. Then there was the identity crisis - Frances had to learn to be Libby, and in many ways, she lost herself in the process. She buried herself when Libby's body was buried with her name. She lost her friends and her family and her very sense of self. And she never felt like she could truly make connections with people under her assumed identity. The only thing that kept her going was the idea of getting revenge, even on the boy who she had once been in love with.

Grey and Shepherd.
Both Grey (the boy who Frances was in love with on the ship, who was now participating in the cover-up) and Shepherd (the boy that Libby was in love with when she died) played major roles in this book and I kind of loved both of them. I was glad that there was no love triangle, though - while Shepherd did have some confused feelings for Frances because he thought she was Libby, nothing ever came of it. In the end, Shepherd ended up being a true friend - someone who was willing to tell it to Frances like it was and helped her come to terms with who she was and who she truly wanted to be. Grey was haunted by the night on the ship as well, so it was hard not to sympathize with him, but it was also incredibly hard not to be suspicious of him. That made for some great suspense in the romance department!
The ending. The ending was pretty open-ended, which I don't always love. But in this case, I was okay with it because I thought that we got enough closure to feel hopeful about where things might end up going and we're left with the idea that, no matter what happens, Frances is going to be okay. She's conquered most of her demons and is ready to move on.

Neutral:

Love at fourteen.
The only thing that held be back from absolute adoration of this book was the idea that Frances and Grey fell in love on a one week cruise when they were fourteen and it was supposed to be this deep connection that somehow lasted four years of separation - even if neither Grey or Frances totally understood or believed that. Oh, and Libby and Shepherd were also deeply in love at fourteen (and Shepherd had ALSO held onto that love for four years, never losing the hope that they might somehow end up together still). I do believe in young love (my husband was only fifteen when we started dating!), but not when it develops in a week! So, why isn't this a complete negative? (You know my feelings about insta-love, so you're probably wondering how this didn't completely ruin the book for me.) A couple of reasons: First of all, I had to give Ryan a little bit of a pass because the love at fourteen was pretty much necessary for the plot to work. Frances had to have been young enough at the time of the shipwreck that it was believable that her facial features were still changing a bit as she grew and four years had to pass for that same reason - it was imperative to the story that people could believe that Frances was actually Libby. Also, the circumstances under which both young couples fell in "love" were pretty extreme - Frances and Grey had this huge (for them) first love experience and then immediately went through a completely traumatic shipwreck and lost each other. It's reasonable to think they would still have a lot of unresolved feelings about each other. Libby and Shepherd grew up together (almost as brother and sister, which I found a little bit ewww, but I gave Ryan a pass on this as well), so they had A LOT of history, even at the young age of fourteen. And again, being torn apart by tragic circumstances (but not being able to completely separate from each other) makes it more believable that Shepherd might have still been harboring feelings for Libby as well. So, while I did occasionally roll my eyes at the mentions of these characters' deep love at the age of fourteen, I was able to look past it.

Daughter of Deep Silence is a grippingly suspenseful read with a strong focus on character development. The book explores what shapes identity and how we can sometimes lose ourselves along the way. I don't know why I haven't read Ryan before, but I will definitely be reading more of her in the future! I give it 4.5/5 stars.

***Disclosure: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review. No other compensation was given and all opinions are my own.***

readsbylaura's review against another edition

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5.0

What makes this book good, in my opinion, is the mystery of course. And the relationship between Frances and two of the male characters. Also, it was to see what she would do at the end of her "revenge."

At first, I couldn't read it because it reminded me of the show Revenge and that show just goes on and on and it gets annoying, but I finally decided to pick up this book again and it pulled me in. The mystery, the character and the way Frances dealt with things and how she tried to figure out who she was and so much depth in her character.

Last but not least, there are so many sayings in this book that you can apply to your life, to your reality is what makes me enjoy it. Whether you go through anything these characters go through or you go through something that might not be worse or the same, whatever it is you can apply it to your life and work with it to make it help your reality.

troetschel's review against another edition

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3.0

A quick, surprisingly fun read. I found this at the thrift store and picked it up to stuff in one of my local Little Free Libraries and accidentally read it. I'd definitely rate it higher for a teen reader - it's a fantastic example of what YA is, plenty of drama and excitement and things that would never go so well in real life. I'd hand it to any younger teen looking for fast-paced thrillers about revenge. Adults won't be nearly as satisfied unless you are willing to completely suspend your disbelief. It's very easy to poke holes in if you stop and thinking about it for a split second.