A review by juhina
Rosebush by Michele Jaffe

4.0

I am a huge mystery thriller junkie. I love anything mystery, especially if it keeps me guessing and thinking and trying to figure out who the murderer is, but in Rosebush's case, it is who wants to see Jane dead. Someone who is still persistent even after Jane ends up almost dying and gets put in the hospital. The phone messages, the secret admirer gifts, it was all so creepy! I really didn't know who the murderer is, and I usually have a gift when it comes to figuring out who the murderer is in a show (The Mentalist) or books. Michele Jaffe was great in making every single one of Jane's friends a bit suspicious, even if she didn't write it straightforward, you get this feeling through avoiding glances, hurried reactions, etc that kept me guessing from one person to another.

The murderer was such a surprise, and the backstory of what in the world made him/her do it finally made sense, in the creepy disgusting way. There was definitely subtle hints and I felt that Jaffe purposefully did not make the murder that suspicious to throw us off! However I salute him for keeping the eerie and creepy factor throughout the whole novel. Jane is popular, and has a ton of friends, but only a couple of close friends and a boyfriend. I just found that every single one of her friends turned out to be the evil twin of themselves was a bit unrealistic. The way each character was portrayed before the murder attempt was sweet, carefree, and friendly. However after the murder attempt, the true colors of every single one of them emerged. Also Jane herself was a bit too blind and, not naive, but ignorant of the way her friends act. So it gets me wondering, did Jane portray them as carefree and nice before the accident but then somehow the accident made her see them the way they really are, or did Jaffe herself portray them as nice people but then made them into the horrid people they are to keep us readers suspicious?

Anyways, all in all Rosebush was a great enjoyable mystery thriller. While I hoped Jane wasn't stuck in the hospital for the duration of the whole book, I did like that she had lost her memory of the night of the attempted murder, gave it a more authentic 'mystery' to the 'mystery thriller' it was.