The Raising

The Raising

3.26 of 5 stars 3.26  ·  rating details  ·  1,332 ratings  ·  378 reviews
Set in and around the campus of a fictional midwestern university, Kasischke’s eighth novel centers on a tragic car accident that has taken the life of beautiful, straight-A student Nicole. A year later, her sorority sisters are still up in arms and lay the blame for Nicole’s death on her boyfriend, Craig, who, they claim, is an irresponsible rich kid. But Craig’s roommate...more
Kindle Edition, 496 pages
Published (first published March 15th 2011)
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Regina
This book had me from the first page, really the first paragraph. I was entranced from the beginning and could not put it down. I spent many way too late nights staying up to read it and long after I put the book down I would be thinking about the characters in the book. Ms. Kasischke draws complex three-dimensional characters beautifully well for her readers. The story progresses slowly in the beginning, slowly in terms of the action, but I do not mean that the story was boring. Far from that –...more
Tauna
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Mara
Nicole Werner, a freshman and sorority pledge at a prestigious midwestern college, is dead. The victim of a car accident, in which her boyfriend, Craig, was driving (possibly under the influence), her death permeates the town and campus. However, from the outset there are discrepancies that suggest something isn't quite right with the story. Shelly, a college employee and witness of the wreck, knows what happened that night on the side of the road, and everything she saw points to Nicole being v...more
Tze-Wen
Let me start by saying that The Raising is a novel with potential. Its cover shows a blond girl lying in the grass, her profile illuminated by moonlight. The story is about a seemingly perfect sorority girl hitting it off with the wrong guy and dying tragically in a car accident. From the beginning, the author slips a few hints about her coming back from the dead (perhaps in a sensual vampire-like fashion?) while slowly revealing what happened in the preceding year.
The trouble I had with this n...more
Michelle, the Bookshelf Stalker
4 out of 5 stars

I liked this book. I liked it enough to read it in almost one sitting. I usually don’t like mysteries especially ones with multiple POV. However, this book pushed all the right buttons for me. I didn’t even mind the ending which was not what I expected. It is a very fast moving book because you already know the “what” from the beginning; you are learning the “why” throughout the book.

I recommend this book to mystery & contemporary readers OR anyone else looking for something...more
Jodi Clager
Believe it or not, I was introduced to this book by a women's magazine. Family Circle or Woman's Day, actually. Generally they recommend books that I can't even begin to have an interest in, but this time I was intrigued. This is an extremely well-written book.

How do I begin? Craig Clements-Rabbitt is returning to college for his sophomore year. He's been home all summer after a car accident that killed his girlfriend Nicole Werner and left him a pariah. Perry Edwards welcomes Craig to their new...more
Patti
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Ryandake
literary horror? horror without the gore? here's a ghost story wrapped in a lit-fic wrapper, a quite well-written tale of deranged sorority sisters and the lengths they will go to in protecting their twisted secrets.

so here's the setup (not spoilery, i think this is all on the back cover): a young woman is killed in a car accident one night, but somehow doesn't seem to be entirely dead. she keeps getting spotted by old friends and acquaintances and lovers. she is apparently not terribly happy ab...more
Angela
This book started off with a lot of mystery and intrigue and kept me going until the very last part of the book. It has 5 parts, the first 4 are fairly fast paced, really interesting, and everyone has an interesting story. Each character is developed fairly well and the reader easily gets a sense of who they are. The whole book is written in a way where I was wondering what was going on. Who was playing with whose mind, were things as they seemed or was there something much more sinister going o...more
Elizabeth
Dec 15, 2011 Elizabeth rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: the anti-mean girls
Shelves: 2011
I totally fell for this book and its, I am a psycho-thriller, zombie sorority girl, craziness. How unlike me. This would be a great, I'm stuck in the airport book, because it's a page turner and yet an easy enough read that you can put it down for a couple of days and when you pick it back up you're right where you left off, without having to think too hard about getting back into the swing of the story.

It's set at a large university, there's the seminar about the dead taught by the smart, fraz...more
Charlie Quimby
I was on the lookout for a literate writer who wrote commercial, genre-spanning fiction, and this New York Times
Karen
If I could, I'd tack on another half a star for the setting, which is Ann Arbor...from the coffeeshop I frequent multiple times a week (Espresso Royale on State *is* an extension of the English Dept.!) to the Wendy's by the freeway (and my house), and everywhere in between, it was pretty cool (and narcissistic, I admit) to have such an intimate knowledge of Kasischke's setting. I definitely couldn't put the book down, either, starting on Friday and finishing the 450+ pages today, but I have to e...more
Michele Perry

When a beautiful, blonde, straight A sorority American 'girl next door' ends up dead after a car accident that shows no sign of blood or supposed 'carnage that would lead to death' - many questions are asked and the university students and teachers lives are put in turmoil. What happened to her? Did her boyfriend cause the accident? Why was there no blood or damage? Why are students apparently still seeing her around campus? What are her mourning sorority sisters trying to cover up?

‘The Raising’...more
Nikki K
I didn't hate this book. In fact, I had a hard time putting it down. It was a fast paced, suspenseful and interesting story. However, I have to admit that I was ticked off when I finished reading it. The ending was horrible!



This is the story of a college campus tragedy. Nicole Werner was a freshman sorority girl the year before this tale takes place. She dies in a mysterious car accident while her boyfriend, Craig, who was driving, survives, but without any memory of that night.



The story is tol...more
Ashley Mackler-Paternostro
I was standing in the Seattle airport, thumbing through the current best sellers in one of the Hudson News stands that dot the airport when I saw this book with it's eerily simple cover. I picked it up and decided that this was story I had to read---and immediately downloaded it on my Kindle.

This book is a mildly scary story. That's all, it's not gruesome horror or depraved psychos on the loose, it's more the psychological stuff. Told from the perspective of 4 people, the plot is thickly twiste...more
Lydia Presley
I just finished this book and I'm seriously messed up. In The Raising, Laura Kasischke tackles sororities, hazing, murder, and cover-ups and she does it from the viewpoints of several people involved: the witness, the victim, the victim's boyfriend, the best friend, the professor. They all have intricate parts and slowly, but surely, Kasischke weaves together their stories patiently bringing the reader to the end conclusion.

Except, was there one? From here on out will be some spoiler-type inform...more
Cate
What I enjoyed about this book, and there was quite a lot to like, was Kasischke's gift of knowing when to allude and when to declare. So much magic is lost when the author doesn't trust her readers enough to put the pieces together themselves. Be aware: some little strings are left dangling here, but in a good, I-wonder-if-I'm-right-about-that kind of way. A good balance here, and unlike a typical campus mystery, or supernatural novel in which the characters find themselves unable or unwilling...more
Laura
If you're looking for a spooky yet literary ghost story, Laura Kasischke's THE RAISING is your book. Kasischke creates a richly realized world of a college campus "haunted" by the ghost of a victim of a tragic accident. The storyline is fascinating and beautifully detailed. I particularly liked how the story unfolded through multiple characters' points of view and how these characters intersected each others' lives in surprising ways. The story grabbed me from the first page. The novel is paced...more
April
THE RAISING by Laura Kasischke is an interesting pyschological thriller.The plot is well written and is told from four different points of view. This is a deep dark story of apparent susides,supposedly accidential shootings,grief,death,rituals,cover ups,ghosts,lies,
deception,disappeance,and college life. On a Midwest College campus, someone will die,ghosts will appear,and answers will be sought to the burning questions of what really happen.The death of a soroity girl,who lives on in the hearts...more
Norma
This was quite an interesting book. At first, I was a little overwhelmed since there are so many main characters. However, once I figured out who is who, then I was able to delve deeper into the story.

The way the book was written was definitely different. It's told from many different perspectives. Plus you are bouncing about through time (pre- and post-accident). But Laura Kasischke was able to do a superb job.

I really liked the characters a lot. I felt they were well developed. And the college...more
Laura McHale Holland
The Raising is the first Laura Kasischke book I've read, and I'm giving it four stars because, while I was disappointed with the way the plot resolved (or rather didn't resolve), I think she is a writer of great talent. She can expertly set a scene, grab a reader's attention, evoke strong emotions, in essence, use language in a compellingly beautiful way to build a story.

I usually have no taste for books that alternate two or more characters' points of view, chapter by chapter. This book does th...more
Vegantrav
This is a fascinating mystery about a girl, Nicole, who is killed (or is she?) in an automobile accident with her boyfriend, Craig.

Nicole, however, even after her death, continues to appear to Craig, to his roommate, Perry, and to a a few of their other friends. Is she a ghost, haunting them all? Is she a vampire? Is she a succubus? For most of the novel, we don't know if this is actually a supernatural thriller or if the author is going to provide us with a rational explanation, but about 2/3 o...more
Emma
I was expecting a supernatural mystery, involving zombies? vampires? My mind was all over the place with excitement for this one. Instead of getting the supernatural willies, I got freaky sorority sisters and a secret ritual that was, apparently, worth dying for.
The Raising started off innocently enough. We know that a girl has died, and her boyfriend doesn't remember anything from the accident. To onlookers, the girl didn't look injured and seemed to be perfectly alright. When her boyfriend, Cr...more
Nancyewhite
I don't know how I feel about this book. At least partially this is due to an impression that the author doesn't know how she feels about the book's story and resolution. I found it compelling reading for many chapters where I'd want to rush to pick up where I left off if I had to set it aside. Other times, however, it was annoying and slow-moving.

The basic story is that of a sorority girl who was killed in a car accident and may or may not be haunting the campus. It moves back and forth in tim...more
Luanne Ollivier
Here's the publisher's description of Laura Kasischke's new book The Raising.

"Last year Godwin Honors Hall was draped in black. The university was mourning the loss of one of its own: Nicole Werner, a blond, beautiful, straight-A sorority sister tragically killed in a car accident that left her boyfriend, who was driving, remarkably—some say suspiciously—unscathed.

Although a year has passed, as winter begins and the nights darken, obsession with Nicole and her death reignites: She was so pretty...more
Melanie Goodman
Following the car accident of Craig Clements-Rabbitt and Nicole Werner, there are conflicting stories of what happened. The media reports a fatality–a girl so damaged by the wreck that she could barely be identified. The woman who first arrived on the scene says otherwise, telling anyone who will listen that the girl was very much alive and barely injured. Unfortunately, not many will listen.

In the aftermath, Craig is ostracized as the killer of a beloved sorority girl. Yet, some students on cam...more
Maria
I read this book on my kindle, so I never actually knew how many pages it was until I began writing this review. I will tell you right now that you would never guess it was a nearly 500 page book! It was such a fast read - easy to follow - and full of so much suspense. I loved it.

The book focuses on one tragic car accident, where a boy named Craig ended up killing his girlfriend, Nicole....or did he?? And this is where all the fun begins. Conspiracies, cover-ups, ghost-stories - they all make f...more
Nancy
The story starts out really strong. There's an accident. A girl has been thrown out of the car on a semi-rural road. A professor at the college saw it from a distance and is the first person on the scene. What she saw happen and what the newspapers and college report, however, are very different. The next chapter is a few months later when everybody arrives back on campus after summer break. The book follows key characters and explores the way the accident impacted their lives (or deaths).

Nicole...more
Jennifer
The Basic Story: Set on a fictional Midwestern campus, the novel weaves a rather complicated tale about a sorority girl named Nicole Werner who was killed in a car accident and whether her ghost has come back to haunt the campus. The book follows several characters. First, we have Craig—a snotty rich boy who was driving the car when the fatal accident took place and Nicole’s boyfriend. Then we have Perry—Craig’s roommate—who grew up in the same small town as Nicole. We also meet Shelley, the fir...more
Crystal
This book gave me the chills and kept me up at night thinking. The story centers around several people and is told from several different points of view. One thing they all have in common is Nicole Werner, the girl who supposedly died by the hands of her boyfriend Craig. I really liked how the author weaved together the lives of so many different people. I was also intrigued with the college campus life that was used as the backdrop. I could possibly see some of these events occurring in real li...more
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Laura Kasischke (born 1961) is an American fiction writer and American poet with poetry awards and multiple well reviewed works of fiction. Her work has received the Juniper Prize, the Alice Fay di Castagnola Award from the Poetry Society of America, the Pushcart Prize, the Elmer Holmes Bobst Award for Emerging Writers, and the Beatrice Hawley Award. She is the recipient of two fellowships from th...more
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