Reviews

The End of Everything by Megan Abbott

ohsnaplez's review against another edition

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2.0

I've loved everything else I've read so far by Megan Abbott, but this really missed the mark for me. Not because of the subject matter, which is relentlessly dark, but because I just didn't find her writing style translating well in this one. I frankly found it a little uninteresting. But I will be reading more by Ms. Abbott, I think she's fantastic and really unique.

90saddict87's review against another edition

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dark medium-paced

5.0

greatexpectations77's review

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

3.25

I read this over quite a while because we were on vacation, so it was in little pieces, but it felt like a super long 8-hour book. There was a whole lot of internal discussion with Lizzie, which is partly appropriate for the age, but it still felt like a little much. And then I didn't love that we
never get a totally clear idea of everything that happened pre and with the kidnapping. I guess that makes sense because a child wouldn't totally understand it or get all the info, but it wasn't my favorite as a reader.
Ms. Abbott likes making up her own words in more poetic prose, which I don't love, and in most of her books it feels like that happens way more in the beginning of the book when she has a lot of steam and then trails off later in the books. I thought the narrator did a really good job. 

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lifeofvicki's review against another edition

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1.0

Honestly, I'm not loving this book and I'm finding that I am choosing not to read just so I don't have to continue this book ... I got about half-way done and it just never became something I felt invested in. Although I would kinda like to know what happens, so I'm leaving it for now & marking it "read" perhaps I'll return to it at a later date, but I want to enjoy what I'm reading not have it feel like a chore ...

danadanger's review against another edition

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2.0

I feel like nothing really happened in this book - Evie disappears, Lizzie does some creeping around, Mr. Verver is weird towards Lizzie, Evie comes back, we find out some vaguely surprising stuff, the end. It was a pleasant enough (relatively speaking) way to spend a few days of reading, good for summer.

hil_knecht's review against another edition

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1.0

I didn't enjoy this at all. I forgot to download a book to my kindle before I left ona trip and had apparently bought this at one point and decided to read it. Mistake.

SPOILER










Creepy relationships between kids & adults- check.
Adults who blatantly cross over the line with kids- check.
Straight up child molestation- check
Incest- check.
Ugh- there is not one redeemable thing about this book. Wouldn't recommend for anyone.

kirstenrose22's review against another edition

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3.0

This was creepy and unsettling, and also hard to put down. But there was a lot of meandering dream sequence kind of stuff too, which was repetitive and sometimes hard to follow. So it averaged out at 3 stars.....

exorcismemily's review against another edition

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4.0

More stunning writing from Megan Abbott. This book was fucked up, though. I enjoyed it, but it deals with some heavy subjects. I still stand by my opinion of Megan Abbott being the queen of writing about girls growing up.

lauraborkpower's review against another edition

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2.0

Although I liked this book, I think there are problems. Pedophilia, rape, and incest are weighty topics, but Abbott glosses over them in favor of writing the story in a thriller-esque style. Don't get me wrong: I like this style and I like Abbott's writing; but I wanted this story told with more significance, more thought.

It might be a problem with the narrator, who is a child herself (an adolescent, 13/14 year old), but it's still a problem.

halfcactus's review against another edition

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dark

2.5

Grooming and sexual harassment/assault framed in a missing persons case and told in the PoV of teenage girls who have daddy issues and are navigating school and sexual experiences. It' more interested in the psychology and the emotions than the crime and mystery, except the psychology and feelings aren't very interesting and the final twist is quite standard. The prose is attractive and the scenes of girlhood would be nice in a coming-of-age novel. 

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