A review by ollie_again
Manhunt by Gretchen Felker-Martin

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

4.0

 It wasn't the few who'd cheered that frightened her; it was the rest, watching with guarded expressions, not looking at those among their number who cried Go back to Maryland, you fucking Nazis and Fuck TERFs! The women who looked at each other in a way Beth didn't understand, a way sealed forever with the cold and rigid bounds of cisness but which nonetheless told her without room for doubt that they couldn't leave too soon.
That was what scared her.
The women who stayed silent.

Incredibly campy and grotesque. I don't read much horror and even less of gore, I somehow couldn't keep my hands off of this book though. Pretty much everything bad and worse happens and with each chapter, I couldn't believe there would be more to come. And there was.

When I picked this up I thought I knew what I'm going to get, TERFs are the main villains and our main characters are trans folks. I thought I knew what the book will do. Well... not really, you get all the obvious with it: the violence against trans people, body dysmorphia, rampant verbal attacks and TERF rhetoric. But what the author managed to do with all these things, how fucked up it all really gets... in all directions, my brain couldn't keep up. The legacy of Mary Shelley lives on and the question of who is the real monster has always the very same answer. Layers upon layers of proof that people, with the same ideologies, opinions like those living and breathing among us in real life, are much more terrifying than anything else. Everything's all-to-familiar.

And at the same time as the cover (which is absolute perfection) suggests this book is also incredibly funny. Not appropriate humour maybe, but funny nevertheless. Chuckle through the pain.

I'd give this book full five stars if not for the overall ending, that was a bit underwhelming for me. Regardless of that, I'll be on the lookout for another book by Gretchen Felker-Martin even if it's not my typical genre.

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