A review by suspencebooks
I Feed Her to the Beast and the Beast Is Me by Jamison Shea

2.0

This book has a lot of good things going for it: great prose, interesting and complex discussions about nepotism and racism, and an almost feral main character. However, the book really suffered a lot from pacing. The first 150-ish pages are very strong but then it flatlines from there and becomes incredibly repetitive. Additionally there were a lot of time skips when the plot would get interesting, and as a result it would make the 339 page book feel double its size. The vibes in this are great but the execution and horror aspects could’ve been more developed.