Scan barcode
A review by mangosugar
Love and Other Words by Christina Lauren
5.0
I’ve been holding off on reading this book for the longest time because I was worried it wouldn’t be up to the hype, but I really enjoyed it.
Starting with what I think worked really well: Flynn created an impeccable town for the story to be set in. Wind Gap felt like its own character and it was built minutely, the atmosphere was sinister, tense, and overwhelming. The author managed to slowly develop the town with physical descriptions of farm slums vs obscenely rich, old-money neighbourhoods, as well as the stories of Camille’s childhood; the horrors of being a young girl in a sex-crazed, isolated, make-dominated town where no one can keep a secret hidden and everyone knows everyone. The town of Wind Gap is really its own person and my favourite aspect of this novel.
Another aspect I really enjoyed was how genuinely scary the characters are. I usually only get scared by supernatural horror, because I can take a human, I at least have a shot at beating another person, but what the fuck can I do against a ghost? But Miss Adora….. oh, that white woman is demonic. Her confrontations with Camille had me shivering.
Unfortunately, I couldn’t give this a 5 star review because of two reasons: 1) The middle really dragged. It felt like a lot of back and forth that could’ve been sped up, especially when it comes to some of Camille’s relationships with other characters. And 2) The ending felt hurried and a little confusing, but I can’t really expand on that without spoilers.
All in all, a very solid read. I was planning on watching the series afterwards but uh I do not want nightmares of Adora lmaoooo
Starting with what I think worked really well: Flynn created an impeccable town for the story to be set in. Wind Gap felt like its own character and it was built minutely, the atmosphere was sinister, tense, and overwhelming. The author managed to slowly develop the town with physical descriptions of farm slums vs obscenely rich, old-money neighbourhoods, as well as the stories of Camille’s childhood; the horrors of being a young girl in a sex-crazed, isolated, make-dominated town where no one can keep a secret hidden and everyone knows everyone. The town of Wind Gap is really its own person and my favourite aspect of this novel.
Another aspect I really enjoyed was how genuinely scary the characters are. I usually only get scared by supernatural horror, because I can take a human, I at least have a shot at beating another person, but what the fuck can I do against a ghost? But Miss Adora….. oh, that white woman is demonic. Her confrontations with Camille had me shivering.
Unfortunately, I couldn’t give this a 5 star review because of two reasons: 1) The middle really dragged. It felt like a lot of back and forth that could’ve been sped up, especially when it comes to some of Camille’s relationships with other characters. And 2) The ending felt hurried and a little confusing, but I can’t really expand on that without spoilers.
All in all, a very solid read. I was planning on watching the series afterwards but uh I do not want nightmares of Adora lmaoooo