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missmim 's review for:
Luckiest Girl Alive
by Jessica Knoll
Usually the problem I have with "bestseller mysteries" is the writing, but in this case that's not an issue. Jessica Knoll can write. And the book kept me wondering what would happen next, which is not something that happens often in these types of books (see also: the ending of Girl on a Train, telegraphed from the get-go). You may not particularly care for TifAni FaNelli (what is up with the capitalization, guys?)--she is acerbic and cruelly judgmental, the mask she uses to get by in a life that has served her some pretty bad, rancid lemons--but I like a multi-dimensional (anti)heroine who doesn't play nice all the time. That said, she can be a bit much, and I did need the occasional break from the cutting remarks about everything and everyone in her life. I'd definitely recommend this book if this genre interests you; it's one of the more well-done books of its kind that I've read recently.