Reviews

The Fates Will Find Their Way by Hannah Pittard

reidwrites's review against another edition

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2.0

I wanted to like this book more than I did. Fine writing. But as another reviewer put it, unsatisfying. I will not miss the characters. In fact, I hardly knew them.

kaseykrok's review against another edition

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4.0

Super unique writing and "train of thought" hypotheticals. Felt like the way your brain writes entire plots in a millisecond while you're falling asleep.

nesleigh's review against another edition

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3.0

The overall subject matter is pretty depressing. But I liked the unique point of view - it feels like you're reading one (unidentified) man's narration but really it's the perspective of the entire group of friends.

dbluminberg's review against another edition

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2.0

DNF—the plot line, missing teenage girl and the musings, rumors, and fantasies of the teen age boys from her town, did nothing for me. I quit after the movie scene with the junior and senior boys.

carmenrlawrence's review against another edition

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2.0

2 Stars because the prose was inarguably captivating… But I wish I could burn every copy of this book. The author seems to hate all women, and perhaps all men. Her condemnation for the upper middle-class life is acceptable, but she seems to torture women on every page of this book. And all of the men, she condescends about as if they are never able to emotionally mature beyond the age of 15. It’s a bleak and horrible Look at Western culture that leaves the reader asking, if this is all that there is, why keep going?

wdminter's review against another edition

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2.0

the ex-virgin suicides.

indrabar's review against another edition

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4.0

A sort of Looking for Alaska for adults, this novel followed a group of boys and how they dealt with the unexplained disappearance of one of their classmates. It was morose and melancholy, but unique in the sense that this was the first book I'd ever read told from a plural POV. The narrator was never named, it was always 'we' or 'us,' and I found that personable, almost like an unnamed member of this group of boys was sitting down telling me this whole drawn out tale from across the couch or something.

In the end, the book was depressing and a reminder that eventually everyone has to move on from, but I liked it. It was beautifully written, and while some of the boys' explanations for what happened to Nora seemed a little far-fetched, it worked.

miraclecharlie's review against another edition

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5.0

Loved it. Brilliant. Rarely am I moved to write a review here but this was an amazing book. Wish I had written it.

jenniip's review against another edition

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3.0

Reminded me of The Virgin Suicides.

kristieburk's review

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3.0

On the fence about this one...between three and four stars...

This is a dark book, filled with all the depravity of human existence, sexual and otherwise. There are scenes that are so painful to read about that you keep hoping for a little comic relief that just never comes.

The noteworthy aspect of the book is the author's narrative and perspective -- it's the collective "we" of the teenage boys in the novel whose friend goes missing. We get a perspective that is all of them and some of them at the same time. What I find most fascinating about the narrative is that it is written by a woman; there is no flowery prose or feminine musings of any kind.

The brillance of the novel starts in the middle and works its way toward the end. I won't spoil anything, but the reader begins to lose sight of what really happened to Nora, and what is in the imaginations of the boys. The author skillfully weaves details that could be read in multiple ways and the details keep building until you think you know what happens. Pittard isn't trying to hide that the stories are all conjecture, but the reader can't help trying to solve the mystery anyway...