Reviews tagging 'Child abuse'

At The End of Everything by Marieke Nijkamp

4 reviews

dreamingofreadingx's review

Go to review page

dark emotional
  • Strong character development? Yes

4.0

I actually really enjoyed this book! At the End of Everything is about teenagers who are abandoned at Hope Juvenile Treatment Center. After a deadly plague takes over the world. Our group of teens has to figure out how to survive as food and supplies slowly dwindle and they realize no one is coming to help.

I was a bit worried that reading about a deadly disease would hit a little too close to home right now. But honestly it just felt relatable. Also this plague and their situation was just so much worse, that I felt a bit grateful. (Which I know sounds ridiculous to say). 
I loved the representation in this book. We got to read from the POV of a non-binary character. Which I’m sad to say, I’ve never seen in any of the books I’ve ever read.
My favorite part about this book was watching all our characters grow so much. We got to see all our characters learning to work together and trust one another. Which is hard for a lot of them to do. 

Overall, I would really recommend this book. Just please check trigger warnings first. At the End of Everything deals with a lot of dark themes. 

Thank you so much Source Books Fire for the ARC! 
*All opinions in this review are my own*

Expand filter menu Content Warnings

lokenstein's review

Go to review page

adventurous dark emotional hopeful inspiring sad tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

This was an amazing book. I picked it up because I heard there were quite a few queer characters in it, including a non binary main character, and indeed there were. But I wasn’t expecting the story to be so much about found families, about everything that is wrong in the prison system – or even in the punishment ideology, especially for young people, and especially in America. Of course this was written (and read) during the covid pandemic, and there are some obvious similarities, although this is still a work of fiction and not really talking about covid (for instance, the plague here has a near 100% death rate). This book broke my heart, but also healed it, and I cannot recommend it enough! 

Expand filter menu Content Warnings

betweentheshelves's review against another edition

Go to review page

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

3.0

If you're trying to stay away from anything that feels like the COVID pandemic, I'd recommend probably not picking this one up. While this is about a plague rather than a pandemic, a lot of the events feel very similar to what happened at the beginning of COVID. Things escalated much more quickly, too.

Anyway! I was expecting a more tense thriller kind of story with this one, and while those elements are there, it's more of a character driven story, focused on the teens in this detention center. Besides the plague and trying to survive, there's not much a plot driving the story. It's definitely the relationships and what transpires between this particular group of teens.

There's good representation here, with a variety of identities represented throughout the story. For the most part, I didn't necessarily feel emotionally invested in their story, but maybe that's because it felt too real? I can't quite put my finger on it. The descriptions of all of the measures they were taking against the plague, though, did feel very real. I did appreciate the world building and the extra pieces of news and information between the chapters. It helped build the intensity overall.

Expand filter menu Content Warnings

sarahmreads's review

Go to review page

dark emotional sad 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? Yes

4.5

As a avid middle school reader, I was obsessed with Marieke Nijkamp's story This is Where it Ends, a story about a school shooting. When I was sent her newest book, I knew I would fall in love with it.

The Hope Juvenile Treatment Center is home to a wide array of teens who have all been punished under criminal law. Their lives change when the guards suddenly disappear, and a deadly infectious plague threatens everything they know. Now the kids of Hope have to fight to survive in a world that doesn't want to remember them.

Nijkamp wrote this in the midst of them recovering from COVID, so a lot of the symptoms and causes of the plague in the story resembles a lot of what COVID did to our society, but on a much worse scale. This includes food rations, plague signs on doors, and even to the point where the hospitals have to eventually decide who to accept and who to let die. It's terrifying. So if you have been severely impacted by the pandemic and find it triggering, I'd steer clear of this book.

The plot very much reminded me of an apocalyptic dystopian story. The plot absolutely reflected that, and as a result a lot of things I expected but wasn't sure in what order to get them in. One thing that I wish there was a little bit more focus on was the whole thing of racial profiling. It was only ever dropped like once or twice. However, I am also glad that it wasn't a major focus. Nijkamp in her author's note explains that she made the main characters of the story white because she knew that, as a white author, she didn't want to take space away from an author of color who could talk about this more in depth and that it isn't her full story to tell. Instead, they recommended a bunch of books by authors of color to read as well as other books about incarceration, which I really loved!

The representation in the book was SOLID! Emerson is the nonbinary of the group and I loved them! You get a lot about their backstory and their relationship with their parents before their incarceration, and I really related to it. I myself have a rough relationship with religion and my identity and sexuality because of parents turning it against me, so I saw myself a lot in what Emerson did. I liked Grace, and I think it was mentioned she might be aroace (aromantic asexual), but I also liked she might have had a closer bond with Casey. However I do wish that was build upon more. There were a few lesbians and people of color as well.

At the End of Everything is a fast-paced look at how our pandemic could have gone much worse, with some great representation. Marieke Nijkamp does it again, and I highly recommend any of their books.

I received a physical ARC of this book from Sourcebooks Fire. Thank you to the publisher, and any and all thoughts and opinions are my own.

Expand filter menu Content Warnings
More...