Reviews tagging 'Fatphobia'

Reprieve by James Han Mattson

4 reviews

ouijabroad's review

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fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

1.5

This book had me hooked in the beginning, but ultimately it didn’t accomplish anything. I think tackling racism in horror (as there IS a lot in horror genre) could have been meaningful,  but in this case it just didn’t accomplish anything.

As others have said,
I still don’t understand John’s obsession with Bryan or his motive for killing him. I don’t understand how it benefited him in any way…if anything it hurt him since the Quigley House couldn’t stay open after the murder.


Also, LOTS of fatphobia. Anyone described as beautiful or good looking is always thin, but anyone who is in a larger body we need to be reminded all the time that they are large and jiggle etc etc especially when it came to Rae. An unlikeable fat character who talks about food???? How original. 

This author talks about racism, stereotyping and xenophobia, but I think he needs to examine his own biases.

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queergoth_reads's review against another edition

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dark emotional mysterious fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.0

I was definitely expecting something different when I started this book. If I had realised it was more literary I don't think I would have been as disappointed as I was with this. 

Overall I think it was a good book but it wasn't really a horror and my expectations were all wrong. I didn't find sympathy for any of the characters except maybe Kendra and think she could have done this a bit more at the end. 

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pdestrienne's review

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dark tense fast-paced

4.0

My good luck that I checked this out on my phone the night I had terrible insomnia. I had this book to keep me hooked and distracted without despairing of my health the next day. It's gripping, the interspersed court transcripts are well deployed, the haunt itself is tense and gory, and the inevitable tragedy casts a doomy atmosphere over the whole thing. I felt like the author wanted me to draw my own conclusions as to the message or the point of the book, and it would make a great discussion book for a strong-stomached book club. HOWEVER any time a character was fat or pudgy they were described in grotesque ways, like their bodies were disgusting moral failures, and that was very disappointing to me.

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corinnereads7's review

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adventurous dark tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

3.0

Before I say anything else, I need to address what I feel is glaring anti-fat bias on the part of the author. For all this book attempted to do with racism, it sure does have a lot of casual fatphobia… I started keeping a list because it kept popping up. Every fat character is mean, stupid or insane: side characters who are entirely one-dimensional. Examples: “Rae - perennially bloated, flatulent and ornery…”; “flapping her arm fat”; “pasty, obese”.

Anyways, despite this, I was able to complete the book because it was very unique and I wanted to see how the end turned out. I did like the structure of the novel, going back and forth between court transcripts of a murder trial and backstories of the various people involved. The scenes in the haunted house were mostly immersive, but there were also times where I had to reread scenes because their believability factor along with the explanations of the room’s setup left something to be desired.
(See: leaping off a bed toward a chest of drawers and somehow grabbing the handle of a drawer, opening it, reaching inside and pulling out an envelope. This is physically impossible to do while mid-air.)


The characters felt decently well developed, some more than others, but again the believability of motives weren’t always there for me.
Jaidee’s desire to assimilate to whiteness was completely realistic, however the intense obsession with Victor and rearranging of his entire life around this man, was pretty impossible to believe. Kendra’s desperation for Shawn (founded on a lukewarm romance) was also a strange way to have her decide to work at Quigley; she was already a huge horror fan, why would her long-distance boyfriend be the driving factor in her pursuit of this job? Leonard with his fetishization and possession of Boodhri felt maybe the most realistic. This book has more characters with over the top toxic obsessions than a romcom!


Overall, I enjoyed the book and found it interesting the way he explored racism and specifically anti-Blackness, just wish he had omitted the fatphobia and built up the character motives a bit more.

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