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This was a perfect book to read for Halloween month. Mavi and Angel are interesting and complex and I did not see that plot twist coming!
Just a note on the YA rating. There is a lot of pretty intense violence and cruelty and profanity that needs to be considered when offering this book as YA. The writing also suggests an older reader as well. Perhaps New Adult would be better.
Just a note on the YA rating. There is a lot of pretty intense violence and cruelty and profanity that needs to be considered when offering this book as YA. The writing also suggests an older reader as well. Perhaps New Adult would be better.
I am gonna be honest here and tell you all that I ended up DNFing this book around 160 pages. I honestly spent the first 9 chapters very confused as to what was happening and had a hard time telling the two main female chacthers apart.
Although the premises was incredibly interesting I found myself very uncomfortable with the characters and the relationships that were developing. Overall this was not a very good read.
Although the premises was incredibly interesting I found myself very uncomfortable with the characters and the relationships that were developing. Overall this was not a very good read.
there was a bunch of inaccurate information and it felt kind of offensive
I received a copy of The Tenth Girl and opted to review it. No requirement was made of it.
The Tenth Girl is the debut novel of Sara Faring, and it is a gothic psychological thriller novel deeply rooted in Pantagonian lore. And it’ll send shivers down your spines.
There’s an abandoned finishing school for girls, and a fresh attempt has been made to get it up and running once again. Despite all of the death and disasters that the house has previously seen.
Enter Mavi, a young woman in desperate need of a fresh start. The isolated finishing school seems like the perfect place for her to make an escape and a new life for herself. But nothing is like what it seems, and it isn’t long before Mavi finds herself in a ghost story to end all ghost stories.
The lore and legend of Patagonia comes to life in The Tenth Girl. Here we see a new influence on the specters haunting our leading lady…and how their legend affects the lives of those within these walls.
If I can offer one piece of advice, with The Tenth Girl; be careful when reading about it online. The ending is fragile, in that a single careless placed sentence could ruin the major twist at the end. And trust me; you don’t want to risk that. My review won’t spoil the ending, I promise.
“Something in the atmosphere is wrong here, a something I can’t articulate – I only feel a discomfort in the hollow of my chest, the same one that tells you you are not alone when you want to be, or that you are entirely alone when you shouldn’t be.”
Warnings: The Tenth Girl has some seriously intense plots that it has to handle. There’s child abuse, child death, and sexual assault (on minors) all mentioned within these pages. Most of these scenes aren’t overly graphic, but they are still highly disturbing. Also shown are scenes of self-harm and suicide attempts.
The Tenth Girl was a dark and disturbing read. It wove legends into fiction, and then through in too many knots and twists to count. It made for an utterly unique and unpredictable read – one that will chill its readers even as they rapidly turn the pages.
There was a lot to love about this novel. The characters were rich, with tortured backstories – they were all so varied, yet left us wondering what the common theme was. This little bread crumb became so much more, over time. And it turned into something beyond expectations.
Speaking of expectations; this novel blew all of mine out of the water. I went into it expecting one thing, and I got that. For a time. But I also got so much more. The twists in this novel are completely unpredictable. I certainly never saw them coming (and that is all I will say on that subject).
I adored Mavi’s character and her quest throughout the school. There were times when I wanted to shake her, naturally. But I feel like that’s bound to happen in any psychological horror, right? Her tender nature and harsh backstory made it impossible to do anything but root for the young woman. So root I did.
One thing I noticed, when prepping to write this review; people seemed to either love it or hate it. There doesn’t seem to be much room for middle ground this time around. I imagine that has a lot to do with the reception of the twist ending. I don’t have much advice for figuring out if you’d like it or not, other than to say go into it with an open mind, and try to avoid spoilers online in the meantime.
This was Faring’s debut novel, and I have to say that I’m impressed. I can’t wait to see what else she’ll come up with, given time. I do know that she’s already working on her next novel (according to Goodreads), but I don’t know much more yet. And honestly, given the experience with reading The Tenth Girl, I think I’d prefer to go into the new novel knowing as little as possible about it.
For more reviews check out Quirky Cat's Fat Stacks
The Tenth Girl is the debut novel of Sara Faring, and it is a gothic psychological thriller novel deeply rooted in Pantagonian lore. And it’ll send shivers down your spines.
There’s an abandoned finishing school for girls, and a fresh attempt has been made to get it up and running once again. Despite all of the death and disasters that the house has previously seen.
Enter Mavi, a young woman in desperate need of a fresh start. The isolated finishing school seems like the perfect place for her to make an escape and a new life for herself. But nothing is like what it seems, and it isn’t long before Mavi finds herself in a ghost story to end all ghost stories.
The lore and legend of Patagonia comes to life in The Tenth Girl. Here we see a new influence on the specters haunting our leading lady…and how their legend affects the lives of those within these walls.
If I can offer one piece of advice, with The Tenth Girl; be careful when reading about it online. The ending is fragile, in that a single careless placed sentence could ruin the major twist at the end. And trust me; you don’t want to risk that. My review won’t spoil the ending, I promise.
“Something in the atmosphere is wrong here, a something I can’t articulate – I only feel a discomfort in the hollow of my chest, the same one that tells you you are not alone when you want to be, or that you are entirely alone when you shouldn’t be.”
Warnings: The Tenth Girl has some seriously intense plots that it has to handle. There’s child abuse, child death, and sexual assault (on minors) all mentioned within these pages. Most of these scenes aren’t overly graphic, but they are still highly disturbing. Also shown are scenes of self-harm and suicide attempts.
The Tenth Girl was a dark and disturbing read. It wove legends into fiction, and then through in too many knots and twists to count. It made for an utterly unique and unpredictable read – one that will chill its readers even as they rapidly turn the pages.
There was a lot to love about this novel. The characters were rich, with tortured backstories – they were all so varied, yet left us wondering what the common theme was. This little bread crumb became so much more, over time. And it turned into something beyond expectations.
Speaking of expectations; this novel blew all of mine out of the water. I went into it expecting one thing, and I got that. For a time. But I also got so much more. The twists in this novel are completely unpredictable. I certainly never saw them coming (and that is all I will say on that subject).
I adored Mavi’s character and her quest throughout the school. There were times when I wanted to shake her, naturally. But I feel like that’s bound to happen in any psychological horror, right? Her tender nature and harsh backstory made it impossible to do anything but root for the young woman. So root I did.
One thing I noticed, when prepping to write this review; people seemed to either love it or hate it. There doesn’t seem to be much room for middle ground this time around. I imagine that has a lot to do with the reception of the twist ending. I don’t have much advice for figuring out if you’d like it or not, other than to say go into it with an open mind, and try to avoid spoilers online in the meantime.
This was Faring’s debut novel, and I have to say that I’m impressed. I can’t wait to see what else she’ll come up with, given time. I do know that she’s already working on her next novel (according to Goodreads), but I don’t know much more yet. And honestly, given the experience with reading The Tenth Girl, I think I’d prefer to go into the new novel knowing as little as possible about it.
For more reviews check out Quirky Cat's Fat Stacks
dark
emotional
mysterious
slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
A mix
Strong character development:
Complicated
Loveable characters:
No
Diverse cast of characters:
Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Yes
Nope. This book is just not working for me. I tried to read my arc twice and I preordered the audiobook thinking I would like it better since the story seems so descriptive but I am so... bored. I can't do it anymore. 20% in, I should be hooked already. I'll maybe pick the audiobook up at another time and try again but honestly, I doubt I will. :/ I'm not rating.
dark
medium-paced
This was the biggest waste of my time I’ve ever had reading a book and it was 456 pages! I can’t even come up with one redeeming factor to sound nice about it. It took me so long to get into and when I finally felt it might be getting good it took a hard turn and just went bad in a different direction. The last 50ish pages I was just so confused and not in a good way. Ending doesn’t make sense. So many things mentioned and not completed. Do. Not. Recommend.
Okay so I finished this and honestly I’m not sure how I feel about it?
The book is interesting and different from the beginning, being written in two different viewpoints from two different time periods that are somehow interacting in the 70s in Argentina. So I was intrigued right away, and I’m not going to lie and say I didn’t pick this one up because of how people were saying it was weird or polarizing online. That’s exactly why I borrowed it from my library.
The book has a great creepy horror feel, set in an old finishing school, isolated on a glacier (or a mountain with lots of ice?), that is being reopened for the first time after some virus killed majority of the attendants and staff some 60 years ago.
I really did enjoy reading from the point of view of Mavi. More so then Angel, since her background was actually made known, instead of Angels which was just being hinted at for majority of the book to make you anticipate the grand reveal. Which really wasn’t all that shocking, I guess? Probably because his background story for the most part really didn’t affect anything in the book at all, except for his mom being dead but we knew that really early on.
The end of this book, with its twist, was kind of a crazy mess and I haven’t decided how I feel about it. So maybe I’ll change this rating later when I’ve processed it more.
The book is interesting and different from the beginning, being written in two different viewpoints from two different time periods that are somehow interacting in the 70s in Argentina. So I was intrigued right away, and I’m not going to lie and say I didn’t pick this one up because of how people were saying it was weird or polarizing online. That’s exactly why I borrowed it from my library.
The book has a great creepy horror feel, set in an old finishing school, isolated on a glacier (or a mountain with lots of ice?), that is being reopened for the first time after some virus killed majority of the attendants and staff some 60 years ago.
I really did enjoy reading from the point of view of Mavi. More so then Angel, since her background was actually made known, instead of Angels which was just being hinted at for majority of the book to make you anticipate the grand reveal. Which really wasn’t all that shocking, I guess? Probably because his background story for the most part really didn’t affect anything in the book at all, except for his mom being dead but we knew that really early on.
The end of this book, with its twist, was kind of a crazy mess and I haven’t decided how I feel about it. So maybe I’ll change this rating later when I’ve processed it more.
The Tenth Girl is a story of a haunted school where nothing is as it seems and no one is safe. Good for anyone who loves a good ghost story and doesn't mind surprising twists that turn everything you think you know on its head.