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A review by sarahetc
Dream Girl by Laura Lippman
4.0
So, this was the first Lippman I've ever read and I don't read much in the way of mystery or suspense with any regularity. I grabbed this because the jacket copy looked vaguely Misery-ish and indeed, Lippman's afterword acknowledges it as inspiration. It is very well done professional just-one-step-away from fan fiction.
The best part, by far, was how well and how tightly Lippman wrote the main character, novelist Gerry Andersen. As a reader, I default to sympathy for whomever is presented as the center of the story. The best authors know how to subvert or repurpose this and Lippman did it as a tour de force. I want to say "guns blazing" but it was very, very subtle. I had some emergency surgery just before I started this, so I was lying on the couch, recuperating and Gerry was lying in the bed, recuperating and while the urge to identify was strong, Gerry became increasingly unreliable. At two-thirds of the way through the book, I wanted to personally kick him in the actual, broken tailbone butt. What an ass. An ass!! So well done.
When it all came together, it came together. I recall specifically feeling a one-off moment of gratitude for how little I read this genre, because I was able to have the lightning-bolt-to-the-prefrontal-cortex I'm sure (I hope) she was going for when it all finally came together. I decided to just marinate in that for a bit and not kick myself for not putting all the clues together. This was just fun. I had fun with it. In hindsight, I would have liked a little bit more detail on the past that led to the climax, but hey, Andersen is an asshole and even that aided the characterization.
Good times!
The best part, by far, was how well and how tightly Lippman wrote the main character, novelist Gerry Andersen. As a reader, I default to sympathy for whomever is presented as the center of the story. The best authors know how to subvert or repurpose this and Lippman did it as a tour de force. I want to say "guns blazing" but it was very, very subtle. I had some emergency surgery just before I started this, so I was lying on the couch, recuperating and Gerry was lying in the bed, recuperating and while the urge to identify was strong, Gerry became increasingly unreliable. At two-thirds of the way through the book, I wanted to personally kick him in the actual, broken tailbone butt. What an ass. An ass!! So well done.
When it all came together, it came together. I recall specifically feeling a one-off moment of gratitude for how little I read this genre, because I was able to have the lightning-bolt-to-the-prefrontal-cortex I'm sure (I hope) she was going for when it all finally came together. I decided to just marinate in that for a bit and not kick myself for not putting all the clues together. This was just fun. I had fun with it. In hindsight, I would have liked a little bit more detail on the past that led to the climax, but hey, Andersen is an asshole and even that aided the characterization.
Good times!