Reviews

Chica al borde by Christina Hoag

diana_acc's review against another edition

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5.0

Un libro increible, con un gran mensaje y con una lectura fácil y fluida, demoré varios días para acabarlo, pero no por falta de ganas, más bien por falta de tiempo.

Te atrapa y cuesta trabajo dejarlo.
Cloe es una adolescente en el verano antes de su último año del instituto que conoce a un chico de 19 bastante maduro comparado con sus compañeros de clases, pero eso no es lo único diferente en su comportamiento, Kieran dista mucho de ser alguien normal y pronto se lo deja en claro.

En esta historia podemos apreciar las etapas de maltrato al que es sometida la protagonista y es bastante claro dónde cometió errores que pudieron marcar una diferencia. Se puede tomar como una guía de apoyo para después del maltrato.

Es una gran lectura para adolescentes y una forma de brindar ayudar para prevenir y sobrellevar la situación.

Merged review:

Un libro increible, con un gran mensaje y con una lectura fácil y fluida, demoré varios días para acabarlo, pero no por falta de ganas, más bien por falta de tiempo.

Te atrapa y cuesta trabajo dejarlo.
Cloe es una adolescente en el verano antes de su último año del instituto que conoce a un chico de 19 bastante maduro comparado con sus compañeros de clases, pero eso no es lo único diferente en su comportamiento, Kieran dista mucho de ser alguien normal y pronto se lo deja en claro.

En esta historia podemos apreciar las etapas de maltrato al que es sometida la protagonista y es bastante claro dónde cometió errores que pudieron marcar una diferencia. Se puede tomar como una guía de apoyo para después del maltrato.

Es una gran lectura para adolescentes y una forma de brindar ayudar para prevenir y sobrellevar la situación.

betwixt_the_pages's review against another edition

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4.0

The summer before senior year, 17-year-old Chloe starts an internship as a reporter at a local newspaper. While on assignment, she meets Kieran, a quirky aspiring actor. Chloe becomes smitten with Kieran’s charisma and his ability to soothe her soul, torn over her parents’ impending divorce. But as their bond deepens, Kieran becomes smothering and flies into terrifying rages. He confides in Chloe that he suffered a traumatic childhood, and Chloe is moved to help him. If only he could be healed, she thinks, their relationship would be perfect. But her efforts backfire and Kieran becomes violent. Chloe breaks up with him, but Kieran pursues her relentlessly to make up. Chloe must make the heartrending choice between saving herself or saving Kieran, until Kieran’s mission of remorse turns into a quest for revenge.


Rating: 4.5/5 Penguins
Quick Reasons: trigger warning--physical abuse, emotional abuse, violence; this was hard to read, but so cathartic at the same time; my life in book form!; emotional, harrowing, heart-wrenching read; poignant and powerful; all girls/women need to read this book


Huge thanks to Christina Hoag, Fire & Ice Young Adult Books, and YA Bound Book Tours for sending me a free copy of this title in exchange for an honest review! This in no way altered my read of or opinions on this book.

When things happen like your parents splitting up, it kind of shakes your whole world, turns it upside down. One minute everything's so normal, it's boring. The next, well, life just crumbles like a stale brownie. And you can't put crumbs back into a brownie.


Okay, penguins--it's time for a tiny confession. Heading into this read, I was very worried. You see... I am a domestic abuse survivor. He never got the chance to take it farther than emotional and psychological abuse, but the scars--invisible as they may be--are very, very much real. I knew, when I read the synopsis for this book, that that was EXACTLY what was waiting for me with this read. But something about this book called to me, regardless. I decided to take a chance, triggering content be derned. (And yes, I meant to say derned!)

Christina Hoag took a very important, very challenging subject...and made it relatable. Personable. REAL. I know the statistics, penguins--so, so many women have faced, are facing, or will in the future face this exact situation. The problem is, hardly none of us actively talk about our experiences--it's been drilled into us to keep silent, to keep secret, to keep hidden. Christina Hoag knew that, I believe--and used that to weave an emotionally harrowing, daunting story of first love...and the many ways it can go wrong or destroy the soul.

"What?" he says.

"You're like a marble. Every time you roll, I see a different color."


What I'm trying to say is, this book is super important, and I feel every girl/woman needs to read it. There is emotional turmoil. There are some very difficult scenes to read and digest. But there's also a raw, unbridled honesty laced into every word--and, at the end, something I feel we ALL need to hear more of: the reminder that we can get through it, that we can stand tall, that we deserve better. That we are loved. The characters are complex and well-written; the prose is subtly poetic and altogether beautiful. The journey is heart-wrenching, and terrifying, and hits home so hard--but it's so important, all the same.

I have so much admiration for Christina Hoag, and this book. She achieved something that many struggle with: a fine mixture of blunt honesty and raw sensitivity, a way to reach out of the pages and into readers' very souls. I recommend this to lovers of contemporary fiction, poetic and poignant prose, and heart-wrenching journeys...but please, if you're easily triggered by abuse, be careful going into this read. I will be keeping an eye out for future Christina Hoag novels with bated breath (I know, this is perhaps a weird choice of words following such a heavy read, but I'm going with it); I cannot wait to see what she tackles next.

sci_mom's review against another edition

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4.0

I received this book through a Goodreads Giveaway. This story is, unfortunately, very important and should be read by all teenagers, not just girls. It is not an easy read, but it is absolutely worthwhile. The main and secondary characters are developed enough to allow the reader to become invested and the tension in the scenes where that is important is well done.

cambamrox's review against another edition

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dark emotional informative inspiring sad tense fast-paced

4.0

whatcha_listening_to's review against another edition

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3.0

Chloe is having a hard time at home so when she meets Kieran who is older and puts some things in to perspective. She trusts him, and things are great until they aren’t. Its interesting to see how fast it can change without you seeing or realizing that your almost dependent on that person.

And they were so young. I wasn’t a fan of Kieran’s from the get go and I went in completely blind other than the blurb. I found him to be very manipulative she justifies some of his behavior I think because she wants attention and he gives it to her. And that can be a hard trap to get out of.
He wanted her all to himself, he never wanted to meet or hang out with her friends. Huge red flags but when you’re a teenager and life at home isn’t easy you turn to whoever will give you what you need.

It was a good lesson book.

I love the voice of Marian, Chloe’s boss at the paper. The narrator did a good job bringing depth to these characters.

faerietears's review against another edition

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5.0

Girl on the Brink is a must read for all teenagers. It’s both light and dark, happy and sad. Despite red flags going up right away for me with Kieran, it’s easy to see how Chloe let the attention Kieran gives her take over her life. It’s easy to see how his attentiveness turns to obsession. Turns to emotional, and eventually physical, abuse.

This book is hard to read. It’s hard to see a nice girl like Chloe, who is already going through so much at home with her dad having moved away and her mom sunk in a deep depression. It’s no wonder she clings to the one good thing in her life, the boy who says he loves her.

Abuse is a difficult topic to tackle, especially when aimed at teens. Hoag did a wonderful job creating realistic characters, setting up the romance, and putting in all the little warnings that things weren’t as good as they seemed. I truly believe this book belongs in every high school. Too many girls go through what Chloe endured and they need to know that they are not alone and that there is light at the end of the tunnel.

I think my favorite thing about this book is that it’s not preachy. It doesn’t read like an after school special. It’s just a good teen contemporary romance… that takes a dark turn into abuse.


Disclaimer: I work for the publisher of this book and I am the cover designer, however I stand by my review and ratings 100%. I would not promote a book I didn’t believe in.

emerxxi's review against another edition

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5.0

The book I would give my teen self.

If I could go back in time and give one book to my teen self this would be the one. I can see so much of my younger self in Chloe and her story. I don't normally read YA as the themes generally don't interest me however I'm so glad I gave this book a chance. It was the first story in a long time that I couldn't put down.

Spoilers from here on:

This is one of the realest and most personal portrayals of domestic abuse I've ever come across. I really empathized with Chloe and how she felt constantly walking on eggshells. I was really able to understand her motivation to keep the peace. I felt like some of the characters could have been fleshed out a little more but I think it lends itself well to how Kieran tries to cut Chloe off from her friends and family.

I really think this is a fantastic book. If you're going to give one book to a young woman in your life please make it this one.

bookoholic's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

Girl on The Brink is such a powerful and an important story. It's hard to find words to describe it. I believe it's a must read for all young people, to help them recognise the abuse in the early stages. 

One way or another we all are faced with the abuse - even if it doesn't concern us directly, we see it in our neighbours, friends, or strangers on the street or in a pub. We should react, we should help, because victims might not be brave enough or not see abuse for what it is. 

Chloe meets Kieran in the time when she's vulnerable - her parents are getting a divorce, her brother is moving our, she's in the final year of high school before making big decisions about the college. She meets a charming guy, who wants to spend every second with her. And she loves it, at first.

The toxic relationship develops, and even though the girl starts noticing the red flags, they're not shining bright red for her. She finds excuses and tries to explain Kieran's behaviour even to herself. 

As a consequence she's facing abuse but doesn't know how to leave. She lost her friends, she's away from the family and she's stuck in a relationship with a monster who'll do anything to keep her or make sure she suffers. 

My blood was boiling when I listened to it. It's heartbreaking, because I know that there are many helpless women experiencing this type of abuse on daily basis. I hope they'll find strength and escape toxic relationships to find their own self again. If you struggle, please seek help. You're not alone. Abuse is not ok. You deserve to be respected and to be happy.

I listened to an audiobook and the narrator was great.

rosepetals1984's review against another edition

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5.0

Quick review for a quick read. I feel awful that this book managed to slip past my radar considering it was published back in 2016, but I'm very glad I had the chance to read it now. "Girl on the Brink" is very much a true-to-life, brutally honest story of a young woman coming to terms with an abusive relationship. Chloe's understandably in a rough place in the beginning of this novel - her parents are divorcing, her mother's going through emotional upheavals that occur in cycles of depression - essentially there are pieces of Chloe's life that are falling apart. It makes sense that when Kieran comes into Chloe's life, she's looking for a change of pace from all the other bad relationships she's been through. Kieran seems to give Chloe attention and apt praise, though it quickly becomes clear that Kieran's affections are a bit...too much. At first Chloe thinks this is just how Kieran is, until she realizes his quick turns of mood and ability to twist the truth into raging fits that put her directly in his path of rage. It becomes a matter of whether or not she can help him or get as far away from him as humanly possible.

I rooted for Chloe this entire novel, and I was glad to see her progression despite all the horrible and harrowing events she endures. I thought the primary and secondary characters were given apt time to develop and fleshing out throughout the events of the story. The tension was well placed and the pacing moved very well - there wasn't a moment where I put down this book at all - it had me so invested in Chloe's story and wanting her - as well as her family and friends - to find better places given the events of the novel. Overall, I really liked "Girl on the Brink" and thought it was a great story not only for its respective audience, but shedding light and truth on abusive relationships in a way that's full of empathy and reckoning.

Overall score: 4.5/5 stars.

petra_reads's review against another edition

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5.0

My original Girl on the Brink audiobook review and many others can be found at Audiobook Reviewer.

17-year-old Chloe is about to start her last year at high school when she meets charming Kieran. Initially, Kieran seems perfect boyfriend material. Unlike other boys Chloe has come across, Kieran doesn’t just want sex, he is very attentive and fun to be with. He actually listens to Chloe when she needs to talk about her difficult time at home. Her parents have recently separated and Chloe’s Mum is not coping well.

I have listened to numerous novels with a domestic abuse theme. What made [b:Girl on the Brink|31870568|Girl on the Brink|Christina Hoag|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1473293275s/31870568.jpg|52053556] stand out from the crowd for me personally was the age of the main character. This is technically a young adult novel, but it should appeal to a much wider audience. There is so much potential for discussion here, it would be a great book to be shared and talked about between parents and teenagers, in youth groups etc.

While some readers/listeners will soon pick up on the tell-tale signs of where Chloe and Kieran’s relationship starts to turn sour, the story is ideal for introducing less experienced audiences to this difficult subject matter in a meaningful but very enjoyable way. Chloe is a brilliantly drawn character and it is easy to feel for her, but what made this really outstanding for me, is the fact that [a:Christina Hoag|7341116|Christina Hoag|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1470587595p2/7341116.jpg]’s characterization of Kieran made me feel all sorts of emotions, too. I was there with Chloe when she tried desperately to help Kieran. The push and pull between needing to save herself and wanting to save Kieran was done so well and really emotional.

[a:Christina Hoag|7341116|Christina Hoag|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1470587595p2/7341116.jpg] has evidently done extensive research into the topic. The novel is well written, the story is completely believable, characters and dialog felt realistic, and the cycle of abuse is portrayed frightfully accurately.

Possible spoiler: Unlike other domestic abuse stories I have read, this one doesn’t end when Chloe “frees herself”. I liked that it went further into the aftermath of it all. The support group meeting certainly provided a lot more information about domestic abuse without ever coming across as being preachy. My only minor niggle: while I realize that most domestic abuse is targeted at women, it would have been nice to acknowledge, within the support group meeting perhaps, that men can also be victims of domestic abuse.

The narration by Angela Rose Marsi was excellent. She had a young sounding voice that suited Chloe’s first-person perspective very well, but her male voices were equally great and very believable. There were no issues with the production of the audio.

This is the sort of novel that should be widely available in educational establishments, libraries, and homes across the country. Highly recommended!

Audiobook provided for review by the audiobookreviewer.com