Reviews

The Elizas by Sara Shepard

rmarcin's review against another edition

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2.0

Eliza is a troubled young woman. She is recovering from a brain tumor, and has just finished her first novel, The Dots. The Dots is a story of Dot and her aunt Dorothy. Dot idolizes Dorothy, but doesn't realize that Dorothy is not the best person for her. Eliza's parents and stepsister are concerned that Eliza is suicidal.
This novel is billed as being Hitchcockian in its tone, but I never got the feeling of suspense and foreboding that Hitchcock was able to evoke in his films. I figured out what was happening with Dot and Dorothy very early in the novel. I didn't know the final outcome, but I wasn't heavily invested in the book, nor in the characters.

inscribedinklings's review against another edition

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4.0

The Elizas Book by Sara Shepard

blogginboutbooks's review against another edition

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3.0

I'm still not quite sure what I think of this novel. I almost put it down after a couple chapters because it's odd and the main character, Eliza, is such a neurotic train wreck that I wasn't sure I could take her for a whole novel. I stuck with it, though, because the novel's plot is compelling. Confusing but intriguing. I was never sure what was real and that kept me reading since I wanted to know how the story would play out. THE ELIZAS is a strange book, also a dark and depressing one. Overall, then, it turned out to be just an okay read for me.

Read my full review here: http://www.blogginboutbooks.com/2018/09/the-elizas-tells-strange-little-tale.html

kdurham2's review against another edition

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3.0

Check out the full review at Kritters Ramblings

There are two books within this one book. Eliza Fontaine is a woman who has been found at the bottom of a pool and she can't swim and this isn't the first time this has happened to her. The other thing that is within this book is a book that Eliza has written and the chapters of the book are interspersed within her chapters about her character. For me it was a little confusing and I had some trouble with it.

colorfulleo92's review against another edition

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3.0

3.5 stars. Didn't quite enjoy most of the book but by the end the story really picked up and it became very readable and entertaining. Not quite the suspenseful tension I like in my thrillers. Never really feelt like a full blown thriller but it was very entertaining and I loved the twist. Maybe not the most shocking but very intruging concept

bookishblond's review against another edition

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3.0

The author of Pretty Little Liars has written a psychological thriller for adults?! Gimme!

I loved the PLL series when I was in high school, and I was beyond excited when I saw that Sara Shepard had a new book out for adults. My memories of the PLL books came rushing back - the nail-biting suspense and the snarky, chatty voice those books are written in.

The Elizas was nothing like that. This book is about Eliza, early-twenties and living in LA. In the first few pages, Eliza checks herself into a luxury resort in Palm Springs, takes a swig of vodka, and suddenly the story twists and she's no longer in her hotel room, but looking up at her worried family's faces from a hospital bed. The book is about what happened to Eliza that night, kind of. It's also about Eliza's book, The Dots. As the publication date approaches, Eliza notices that her book is bleeding into her life. The events won't stay put - what happened in her book and what happened in her real life?

Yeah, I know, it's a great idea for a novel. But there is a big problem with The Elizas, and it's Eliza herself. She is a remarkably unlikable narrator who does not have many human relationships - there's her roommates, who she doesn't seem to like, and her family, who she really doesn't like. Eliza has some quirky hobbies - she works in an oddity shop and teaches a taxidermy class - but instead of adding an interesting facet to her character, these details get lost in the plot, since they are so at-odds with everything else. Eliza is an author, but we don't see her writing, and when other characters ask her about her writing process, she consistently says, "um, I don't know." Later in the book, details are revealed that can arguably answer my questions, but I am still unsatisfied with Eliza's character. We are never given any details about her character that would endear her to us, even a little bit.

Still, this book had an interesting enough plot, but I wouldn't prioritize reading this one.

sconleezy's review against another edition

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3.0

Interesting but predictable. the writing was good but within the first 100 pages i knew what was going on...

sa_wah's review against another edition

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1.0

DNF

13iscute's review against another edition

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4.0

2018 Pop Sugar Reading Challenge:
#16 A book about mental health
#34 A book that's published in 2018

“The Elizas” is a stand-alone mystery following the “unreliable narrator” trope, but in a different way than “Gone Girl” or “The Girl on the Train”. A little slow to get going, but gets going about halfway in, and then I did not want to put it down, even though I ended up staying up 1.5 hours past my bedtime, oops. There is a novel-within-a-novel, “The Dots”, with alternating chapters showing the main story vs. excerpts from the novel. This felt a little off at first, but the alternation ended up being at a good pace, so much so that near the end of the story, where there were a couple of Eliza chapters in a row, I was disappointed to have to wait to get another installment of Dot’s story! As the novel progresses, it ties together storylines and mysteries steadily and neatly, and keeps you hanging on until the very end. A fun and engrossing read.

The remainder of this review is my personal summary to help me remember what I’ve read. It has tons of plot details and reveals the ending, so don’t read unless you want to be totally spoiled!

SpoilerA novelist on the verge of publishing her first novel, Eliza Fontaine is fished out of a swimming pool. Her family thinks it’s another suicide attempt, but Eliza knows she was pushed, but why? Eliza’s memory has been foggy, and she was drinking that night, so that doesn’t help. As she digs deep to try to solve her own attempted cover, she realizes her life and her resurfacing memories are eerily similar to the details in her book. Too similar.

Alternating chapters are excerpts of Eliza’s book, “The Dots”. The Dots is about a girl named Dot, who is a doppelganger of her Aunt Dorothy. Dorothy loves Dot and is by her side as a young Dot suffers through a hospitalization for seizures. Dot is sent to the ICU, Dorothy disappears, and Dot recovers. Dorothy is nowhere to be found for 12 years, but shows up again when Dot is in college. Dot starts going out regularly with her beloved aunt, but starts getting sick again with symptoms like those from her childhood. At first, Dot attributes it to drinking, but when her mom finds out she has been hanging out with Dorothy, she tells her daughter the truth. Dorothy has Munchausen by proxy disease, and poisoned Dot as a child, lacing her IV tubes with strychnine to incite her seizures. Dot, suspecting that Dorothy has been lacing her drinks, surreptitiously switches the drinks one evening. Dorothy gets really sick, and the two end up fighting on a bridge, where Dot pushes Dorothy over the guardrail onto the highway below.

In the real world, piece by piece, Eliza comes to find out that the novel she has written is actually an autobiography, written in a cathartic bout after what she believes was a surgery to remove a brain tumor. Eliza hadn’t remembered that the story and its details are really about her, but now her memories are starting to be triggered, and with admissions from her family, she begins to understand what happened to her. The events of the novel were real, with Dot representing Eliza and Dorothy representing Eliza’s Aunt Eleanor. Her family, trying to help her move past the abuse, put her through memory-deletion therapy, which is why she remembered nothing explicitly. But those memories were still there, and came out in the form of the novel. And the feelings were still there, which came out in paranoia. It was Eliza’s step-sister who pushed her in the pool, in a poorly-guided attempt to break her out of a state of paranoia.

The book hints that Eliza’s life is the same as Dot’s fairly early on, and the novel excerpts clearly outline what happened to Dot/Eliza, so the remainder of the novel is not too much about solving the mystery, but seeing how all the details come together. But it was engrossing, keeping me reading the final 2/3 of the novel in one sitting. It helps that there is one mysterious thread that remains open until the epilogue, making you wonder if they are ever going to resolve it, and keeping you reading until the very end. Throughout the novel, Eliza has been seeing her doppelganger around town and has been afraid. Finally, three years later, at Eliza’s second book launch, the doppelganger reveals herself. She is a nurse from one of the hospitals where Eliza had stayed as a child, and she looks so much like Aunt Eleanor that Eleanor paid her to spend a day at the spa in her name, so that Eleanor would have an alibi the day that she pushed Eliza’s doctor down the stairs. The nurse just wants to admit this to Eliza, and to also let her know that she saw Eleanor get pushed off the bridge, that Eliza doesn’t have to be guilty and doesn’t have to worry, because she knows for sure Eleanor is dead. The novel is left a little open-ended but also tied up cleanly. It’s possible that Eleanor had somehow switched places with the nurse at the last minute, and the nurse died and this is really Eleanor. But the nurse’s words leave Eliza assured that her aunt really is dead, so the reader can feel assured too.

routergirl's review against another edition

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2.0

Chaotic. Strange. At times excellent, at other times just way too messy.