Reviews tagging 'Death'

This Is How We End Things by R.J. Jacobs

4 reviews

lindslay777's review against another edition

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dark emotional mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.75

I really enjoyed this and didn’t want to put it down! I figured out the murderer before it was revealed so it didn’t hit as hard for me :/ The writing style made it a fast and easy read.

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pvp_niki's review against another edition

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mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.5

I guess if you're an avid reader of crime and thriller stories you'll love this one as well. If you look for something that stands out, however, this book will not be able to deliver.

Certain genres are just not my cup of tea unless they're mixing or bending the genre or have a specific and unique theme elaborated well and extensively apart from the main plot. Crime/mystery/thriller is among these genres. What intrigued me most about this book was the science of lies and that the suspects study this topic.
This is a book with multiple POV's so I was hoping something like a lot of unreliable narrators who you cannot trust on even when they ask something, and who'd carefully manipulate their innocence appearance to the point that even their thoughts are misleading, like "think innocent then you'll act innocent naturally". However, I soon started to suspect that this wouldn't be the case and didn't really expect that a huge plot-twist would reveal the contrary (and it didn't).

If you look at it as a crime/thriller/mystery story in itself, one can say it's decent; the story, the characters, the execution, all decent but nothing groundbreaking that'd make me recommend this book over a dozens of others from the genre.

What disappoints me the most is that the science of lies appears at a very minimum level. There's a presentation of one of their experiments at the beginning where there's some mention of this, but the main aim of this scene is just to provide us with one more possible suspect. Then literally nothing. Towards the end, there's a very short conversation about this topic between a police officer and one of the undergrads and it's basically just like this: "no, officer, your information is wrong, liars don't avoid eye contact at all, if anything, sociopaths engage even more when lying". Which is funny because anything we saw about lies during the book was from this police officer's POV who was convinced she can tell if someone is lying or not and her hunches looked like working.
Otherwise, there's no more lies and talking about lies than in any other crime stories. I mean secrets and lies are the very basis of the genre, if you want to make your book revolve around this theme, you have to do more than just the "everyone has a secret in their past" trope and a lot of red herrings. Especially that I didn't find the characters very unique, most of them followed the very usual tropes of dark academia thrillers and they mostly stayed two-dimensional.

On the other hand, the execution is decent and I think it uses quite a few cinematic tropes in how it's built and especially with action-packed scenes.

As for the audiobook aspect, I think the narrator did a decent job with it. One thing that irked me however was the overwhelming amount of "he/she/Scarlet/Robert/etc. said" tags. I'm not sure though if this was due to the narrators repetitive intonation on these sentences or if there actually were more of these than in other books.

Thank you for NetGalley and the publisher for providing the ARC.

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lilawsahar's review against another edition

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challenging dark mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

What a fascinating read. I love the concept of psychologists being suspects in a murder case. 

I don’t think their case on deception was too interesting or pertinent to the case though. 

I liked learning that people who are liars usually keep eye contact and are charming, and in turn, to catch someone in a lie, you must be warm and create report, then catch them by asking them something baffling. 

I had the killer down to two people at the end:
Kings and Mark. I can’t believe I was close: it was Mark. I think the truly terrifying part was Mark having no reason to try to kill his ex or actually kill Lyons other than pay back for taking sole custody of his kid. It’s scary to think the person doesn’t need a reason for murder.

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xalrynne's review against another edition

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

4.25

Pitched as a dark academia thriller, This Is How We End Things is a fast-paced murder mystery with lots of twists.

The story takes place at a university among a cohort of six PhD students who are studying the psychology of deception. Which means they are all very skilled at lying. And then one of them ends up murdered.

Even the most skilled liar can’t keep their darkest secrets from coming to light during the investigation, and each student has secrets they’re aiming to keep hidden.

I really enjoyed this novel, but I wouldn’t describe it as dark academia. It has an academic setting and there’s a murder, but I don’t feel like it has the right vibe to fit in with the dark academia subgenre. For one, the main POV in the novel is a detective, and I feel like in dark academia, there are no detectives right off the bat. The focus was less on the students’ POVs and actions and more on what the two detectives were discovering as they were investigating the case. We did get POVs from the six students as well as some other minor characters, but I did feel like the “main character” of this book was Detective Larson.

Overall, though, this book was a quick read that really captured my interest. I read it very quickly and had a great time trying to solve the mystery along with the characters.

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