![]() ![]() I can get why she might not want to take her meds which turn off the hallucinations. Within four years, she has to deal with the loss of both parents and her best friend. Her obsession with escapism is understandable. The “movies in her mind” warp reality whenever things get tough, which means not even she always knows if what she’s experiencing is real or not. As a narrator, though, Charlie is fascinating.Īs we learn more about her, we understand just how unstable her mental state is. ![]() She’s overly dramatic and pretty snobby when it comes to her one interest in life. Would I be friends with her in real life? Probably not. As a person, I admit that Charlie is only so so. Our quirky movie nerd who is struggling so hard to live (in more ways than one). The unreliable narratorįirst off, I have to talk about Charlie. I picked out a few things that I liked the most to highlight what makes the book special. ![]() ![]() It wasn’t the perfect book, but it was fun, and once it got going, boy, did it get going. (If you’d like to check it out, head on over to the publisher’s website!) What worked Set in the ’90s, what would happen when a girl was trapped in a car with a stranger who just might be a serial killer? There will be spoilers ahead, so if you haven’t read the book yet, be warned. I wanted something maybe a little spooky and full of mystery, so it seemed like the perfect choice when I stumbled on Survive the Night by Riley Sager. For October, I was looking for something a little different from my usual book picks. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |