Reviews

Les Monstres by Lauren Beukes

bippityboppityboop's review against another edition

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5.0

Spooky, rollicking, literary horror. Perfect PoMo scary story for people who don't really like scary stories. Be brave and try this one! Recommend to: those interested in crime fiction, contemporary art, stories about the Internet, taxidermy.

bookishkaiti's review against another edition

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am I getting in a slump??? why am I dnfing so many books? this one had way too many characters to keep up with. maybe it made sense further along but I'm not invested enough to see it played out.

_cherish's review against another edition

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It seemed very juvenile. And the beginning was so confusing and just not drawing me into the story in any way. 

moodyjulia's review against another edition

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3.0

Oof this book was a lot to process. I really liked it at first and it certainly took a lot of twists and turns but the last 100 pages were pretty out there and felt thrown together.

checkplease's review against another edition

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4.0

4.5 stars

zer0faults's review against another edition

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2.0

SpoilerThe book was OK all the way through and I was enjoying some of it, until the end when everything the crazy guy thought he could do, he actually could do. Maybe it would have been better if it was better horror ... is that what it was going for? I don't even know.

lsparrow's review against another edition

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4.0

I liked the distinct characters and the way there seemed to be more to the story than you could know at any given point.

alfsan's review against another edition

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4.0

This was just a fantastic rollercoaster. Started reading and thought it was your run of the mill serial killer + troubled cop going through something unique story. And although on the baseline is that, it's also so much more. First of all the way the author embodies the characters, all unique and with a strong inner voice, is a game changer. The way the villain of the story is portrayed is also new. Not a madman, not an evil killer. Just something else. And I'm not referring to something as diverse as SK's The Outsider (don't want to spoil anything for you). I've never read about this author but ran into The Shining Girls cover and Broken Monsters was the one I could get my hands on. Will definitely continue reading Lauren Beukes and her style.

After all this brag and excitement, why don't I give it five stars? overall it was great, but it wasn't 5 star fiction literature great. My points of comparison in somewhat related genres would be 4th of july creek or swan song (if you're into fiction). And I rate it based on emotions produced. Those books, damn, made you happy, sad, cry, etc. Whatever the emotion was, it was hard and sucked you in deeply. And although Broken Monsters does entice a good laugh, and cheering, and also sympathy for stuff that happened to the characters, it still lacks a bit of depth in that emotion.

Till next book!

megadeathvsbooks's review against another edition

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3.0

This one just didn't capture me like her previous one, The Shining Girls. The pacing seemed off and all of the characters were apart too long before they became intertwined. This made the plot seem disjointed. Maybe it is purposely playing with the title and theme of being broken, but it resulted in a less enjoyable reading experience.

billymac1962's review against another edition

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4.0

Well. I'm not sure where to begin with this one.

First, an anecdote of what it is to be me. This is the second consecutive book I have read to have a character with Ouija board letters tattooed on her stomach. This kind of stuff happens to me all the time. Really, really strange coincidences. So there's that. On to the review.

Lauren Beukes really impressed me last year when I read The Shining Girls. In it, she put her own bent slant onto the serial killer genre with a time-travelling psychopath. A lot of people had closure issues with that one, but I thought it was brilliant.
Now comes Broken Monsters. This, again a serial killer theme, but with...oh, I wish I could tell you...

Suffice it to to say that with two novels that are essentially crime thrillers with a weird turn to them, I think we can say at this point that this lady is a genre unto herself.

This book read like gangbusters.
(It's worth noting that our home office has completed renovations and I am once again working in the downtown core of Ottawa after 3 years in a temporary location. Within that time I have gotten married and moved to a new home and I have decided to give public transit another chance. I now love it. It's a quiet 50 minute commute and I now have 100 more minutes to read every weekday! Thus the ripping through this book.)

Where was I? Yes, the book read like gangbusters and man, towards the later part things seriously become unglued, in a holy shit, everything is happening kind of way. But while the main storyline was of course the main focus, my favourite aspects of the novel were around Layla and Cas, the detective's daughter and her friend, and their social media activity. Beukes is also making a statement on social media in the way it comes into play with the investigation.

Again, Beukes has top writing chops. Her prose is very good and dialogue is very authentic.
I'll listen to any story she has to tell. 3.5 stars rounded up.