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Graphic: Animal death, Child death, Death, Mental illness, Fire/Fire injury
Moderate: Racism, Blood
Minor: Cursing, Emotional abuse
Moderate: Cursing, Racism
Minor: Alcoholism, Animal death, Alcohol
Graphic: Death, Fire/Fire injury
Moderate: Animal death
Minor: Ableism, Cursing, Drug use, Vomit, Dementia, Grief
Moderate: Cursing
Graphic: Child death, Cursing, Death, Panic attacks/disorders, Grief
Other than that, I actually found myself relating to the main character. I'm poor as fuck, never committed a crime, and dont have migraines - but I do have memory loss due to neurological issues that wiped most of my teenage memories completely and made my mother constantly worried about me. I understood when she said she didn't want to be pitied, and then Gat said well why the fuck you saying all this shit about your migraines then. Like, dude, just because she doesn't want to be pitied doesn't mean her migraines poof! become less of her life.
And same with the romance. Sadly I still remember some of my pathetic flings, how as a youngster you think the first love is real and forever and the best thing since Betty White. The romance was a damn mess but didn't we all make bad, cringey, makes us look back and think "oh no girl what are you doing" type relationship choices as teens.
And.. the twist. Goddamnit I picked it up right away.. when Cady realized no one was responding to her emails. Yeah the first thought should be "they're too rich to care about their email account", but with how absent they were my mind went straight to "they're dead aren't they. Oh no you better not". And they were. Even worse, why not throw them in as ghosts and badly explain the whole entire last part of the book. And the whole reveal be a fire. All died in a fire. And became ghosts. What a twist. Yaaaawn. When it comes to rich people drama, The Cousins by Karen McManus came out on top. That's the type of twist I was looking for, not something on the same level as "it was all just a dream!" (But instead, replace dream with ghosts).
Graphic: Animal death, Chronic illness, Cursing, Death, Suicidal thoughts, Vomit, Medical trauma
Moderate: Blood, Dementia, Grief
Minor: Infidelity, Death of parent
Graphic: Death, Mental illness, Grief, Murder
Moderate: Addiction, Alcoholism, Animal death, Chronic illness, Cursing, Drug use, Racism, Suicidal thoughts
Graphic: Alcoholism, Animal death, Child death, Cursing, Death, Emotional abuse, Racism, Blood, Dementia, Grief, Religious bigotry, Fire/Fire injury, Alcohol
This is a great introduction into the world of mysteries with a good plot twist for YA readers new to the genre. For those who aren't new to it, it still made for a good twisty psychological thriller with YA-aged characters. The story is told from the perspective of Cady who is suffering from a traumatic injury from an event that happened a few summers previous on her family's private island. (Her family, the Sinclairs, are of that old, rich, white money and they give off a level of elitism that wants to make you vomit a bit. But the kids in the family are fairly turned off by it as well, so at least you're in good company.)
What I loved:
I loved the writing style, the short chapters, learning bits and pieces of information of what really happened that night a few summers ago as Cady starts to remember as well, the twist to the plot towards the end when the final truth is revealed, and the appeal of this narrative to YA readers.
What I didn't love:
The Sinclair family (but this was intentional -- they're just not lovable) and the classism and privilege we see in the family (again, intentional). I wish the wrongness of that had been more addressed than it was, but this story I think was more a story of a tragedy than anything else (the characters' inability to learn and change, to be better people than what they were).
What I had mixed feelings about:
The ending ... it's a heartbreaker and, while we know right off the bat that a tragedy has occurred, I didn't realize it would wrench my heart as much as it did, which in and of itself is entirely fine in an ending. I think I wanted a little bit more hope entwined in it as well. I wanted to see characters learn from their mistakes, to see a family working towards change to be better (when instead we saw fully the consequences of a terrible decision that led to families broken apart, lives ruined through substance abuse, and other things - entirely realistic, though, I guess, in that regard).
Moderate: Alcoholism, Chronic illness, Death, Grief
Minor: Addiction, Animal death, Cursing, Racism, Suicidal thoughts, Dementia