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deenzy 's review for:
To Have and to Hoax
by Martha Waters
Oh for the love of Satan.
I don't think this author and I are sympatico. Oddly enough, I didn't mind the characters, minus the utterly asinine, mule-headed inability to have a conversation with each other, their friends, or themselves. Also, the weird "pranks" they pulled on each other were just...not okay. At all. I was distinctly uncomfortable from very early on.
I'm concerned that anyone faking a serious illness (or an AFFAIR) with no thought to the consequences has no business being called an adult, and should be committed.
Emotional constipation and deficient emotional intelligence takes on a whole new meaning with this. If you dislike the miscommunication/pride trope, please give this away to someone with more patience than I.
I don't think this author and I are sympatico. Oddly enough, I didn't mind the characters, minus the utterly asinine, mule-headed inability to have a conversation with each other, their friends, or themselves. Also, the weird "pranks" they pulled on each other were just...not okay. At all. I was distinctly uncomfortable from very early on.
I'm concerned that anyone faking a serious illness (or an AFFAIR) with no thought to the consequences has no business being called an adult, and should be committed.
Emotional constipation and deficient emotional intelligence takes on a whole new meaning with this. If you dislike the miscommunication/pride trope, please give this away to someone with more patience than I.