Dare Me

Dare Me

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3.19 of 5 stars 3.19  ·  rating details  ·  4,649 ratings  ·  992 reviews
The high school cheerleading squad has a new coach: Colette French, perfect in every way, a cool and commanding presence who instantly wins the girls' approval and allegiance. The girls find themselves drawn into Coach's life, opening up to her and eagerly vying for her attention.But when a suspicious suicide hits close to home, and the police investigation involves Coach...more
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Published October 16th 2012 by AudioGO (first published May 1st 2012)
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karen
megan abbott knows all the secrets of being a girl, and she keeps on spilling them, book after book."it's fun to be a girl!!" nah, man, it's not. have you ever seen the feet of an actual ballerina? (view spoiler)[ (hide spoiler)]it's like that - underneath all the pink frills and the careful make-up, there is a horrorshow waiting to be revealed, and it's anything but pretty and elegant.

this book is neither her girl noir nor her coming-of-age style, but some sort of seam where they both meet. the...more
Emily May

“There's something dangerous about the boredom of teenage girls.”

How can I describe this book? Well, if Bunheads had a manic, intense and obsessive older sister, then this would definitely be it. Dare Me is about teenage girls - and cheerleaders in particular - straddling the line between childhood and the big world of adults but it isn't a tale that conjures up the usual images that high school cheerleading brings with it. This is an intense book about obsession, sexuality and competition. I t...more
Kemper
Previously I’d read two Megan Abott books, The Song is You and Queenpin. Both were razor sharp noirs set in the past with cynical hustlers smoking cigarettes and drinking whiskey and basically behaving like the type of people who belong in a black and white movie. This book is about cheerleaders in a modern high school.

It’s not as different as you’d like to think.

Addy has long been the best friend and lieutenant to Beth, the captain of their cheerleading squad. Beth is smart but self centered wi...more
kari
Sad,ugly characters doing sad,ugly things to one another. This is supposed to be what is in the heart and mind of the all-American girl? I'm not buying that.
This is how Addy sees herself: p. 258 "You see these glitters and sparkledust and magicks? It's war paint, it's feathers and claws, it's blood sacrifice."
Who the heck is she at war with? Herself? Who are any of them at war with? Why are any of them so angry? If I am expected to care, then explain to me why they are this way. Otherwise don't...more
Anthony Vacca
I’ve been hearing Megan Abbot’s name in certain circles of crime aficionados for a while now, so she has held a comfy spot on my to-be-read backburners for at least a year or so. But then my GR friend Kemper (his review can be found here) sent me this compelling interview with Abbot on story vs. plot. Her very intelligent answers immediately impressed me, and it was obvious how seriously she took writing. So I decided to grab this book, Dare Me, since it was her newest title and because I felt I...more
Moira Russell
"Noir cheerleaders?" I thought. "Sure, I love Abbott, but no, really, not for me." (The first time I heard about Buffy ever I said "Vampires in high school, are you shitting me? Why would I want to watch that?") But I was powering my way through The End of Everything, slack-jawed, eye-peeled and all agog, and at the back there was a reader's guide (horrible and useless), an author's interview (you're.....glad that Older Lizzie still feels the charm of that family? Uhh. Did you read your own book...more
Melissa
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Josh
All that glitters and sparkles; candy-made for thirsting eyes - It's all smoke and mirrors - plumage full of sweet smelling delights, serving as a hideaway for the stingers that lay in wait. 'Dare Me' is home to those stingers. Full of pretty faces with indecent thoughts. These characters of cheer spread terror. While their eyes and sickly sweet mouths promise honey, the bee sting sharpens its point laying in wait for the perfect moment to penetrate normalcy and brandish a bloody streak across t...more
Emma
This book is the epitome of what a clique of girls can and will do to each other. The helplessness, the highs, the annoyance, and the power that comes with the territory of social standing. The book delves into a different aspect on cheerleaders which strays far from the colourful, pom pom waving, beautiful, pretty smiling teenage girls. Instead your thrown into the competitive, ruthless and selfish standpoints of young impressionable individual girls, who happen to be cheerleaders.

The writing...more
Greg
Sort of surprisingly amazing. It is kind of in the same vein as Rian Johnson's Brick (high school neo-noir), but Abbott doesn't super-stylize her writing, keeping a tight control on plot and tone in an effort to still keep it in some semblance of the "real world." After reading Dare Me, I am filled with respect and admiration for Abbott. At first I questioned the decision to write in first-person because for most of the book Addy does not add particular insight to the characters or story, but as...more
Debra Morris
What an amazing book! Abbott seems to be spot on in capturing the voices of the young women in her novel. This is my third Abbot book and I feel like I've discoved a great writer.
Go Flash Go!
Review posted at: Read, Rinse, Repeat

In "Dare Me," a group of high school cheerleaders finds their "Queen Bee" status challenged with the arrival of Colette French, their new coach. The girls had no use and no respect for their previous coach; they "owned" her. When Coach French enters the girls' world, she commands their respect. She breaks them down and whips them into shape. But cracks soon begin to show in Coach's professional facade as she crosses boundaries with these girls, inviting them...more
Elaine
A brutal and sly noir take on high school cheerleaders, all inner (and some outer) violence, surprising athleticism, taking no prisoners in the war on their primary enemy - food!, parents invisible, and boys nearly so, with lesbian undertones so overamplified that it surprises you that there is supposed to be any surprise in revelations in that vein. While intriguing and a page turner, and admirable in going so wholeheartedly bleak and giving us such an unlikeable little clique to work with (no...more
Andrew Nette
“At first, cheer was something to fill my days, all our days. Age fourteen to eighteen, a girl needs something to kill all that time, that endless itchy waiting, every hour, every day for something – anything – to begin. There’s something dangerous about the boredom of teenage girls.”

So says Addy Hanlon, narrator of Megan Abbott’s latest book, Dare Me. And you better believe it.

I’ll make no bones about being a huge fan of Abbott’s work (I've previously reviewed her work on this site here and her...more
Marleen
I rated this book 4.5 stars, but it's closer to 5 then 4, hence the rating above.

Addy Hanlon and Beth Cassidy have been friends for years, inseparable and invincible they face the world side by side; Beth the leader and Addy her lieutenant. Both girls are tough and both girls are bad, they are in control of their world and the people around them as only teenage girls can be.
When the new school year starts the cheerleading team Addy and Beth are members of has a new coach, Colette French. Young,...more
Kwoomac
I've always said you couldn't pay me enough to be a teenager again. This book is all the reasons why. These cheerleaders are so caught up in their little world. For some reason, they think everyone is envious of them and that just made me sad. The thing about being a teen is the whole self-centeredness of it all. You really do think you are the center of the world, everything revolves around you, and everything is a Big Deal. At one point, Addy looks down on Tacey's sister, who is on the debate...more
Isamlq
Girls can be scary. Dare Me offers a fascinating, confusing, conflict-inducing and sometimes terrifying peek at bonds that are the farthest thing from what’s simple. Think Imaginary Girls. Think Pieces of Us. Then think of those girls perfect from afar, but not quite so, up close.

The girls. Both Beth and Addy are on top and embody that cliché of other girls wanting to be them. This is at least how things seem to Addy for Beth. A little more twisted is how in Addy’s mind, she’s but second fiddle...more
LAURA KAY A Novel Review
http://anovelreview.blogspot.com/2012...

Addy Hanlon and her best friend Beth Cassidy rule their cheer squad; Beth as captain and Addy her lieutenant. The squad doesn’t just look up to them—their afraid of them. But when Colette French walks into the gym and takes over as cheer coach everything gets flipped around. Coach French has every intention of taking her girls to regionals and she needs to get them ready. First things first she dethrones the cheer captain.

Beth seems to lose interest in che...more
Meghan
Different, in the best way. Fun, in the very best way. So stylized that I would close it and find myself narrating my life in Dare Me style, observing with a hard eye. There are no teenagers who talk like this, you will say to yourself, and that is exactly what makes them good, Deadwood-good. They talk like no one you know so they live in their own place, a tough place, a place at the core of youth and women.

Love the detail: the cheer slang, the cell phones, the eating disorders. Love most of a...more
Sonia Reppe
Jun 12, 2012 Sonia Reppe rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: cheerleaders
Pretty good writing for a plot-driven novel. Abbott rocks the imagery and--I don't want to say Cheerleading metaphors because that sounds too simple and it was more subtle than that--she reveals Addy's cheerleader life, the good and bad. The plot got kind of awesome in the second half; it really kept me guessing. As for characters, Addy and Beth's relationship had depth, so that was cool.
Nicole Wietstock
Having a personal connection to a book is an amazing feeling and it makes you want to keep reading. That is exactly the attachment I felt to the book Dare Me. Being a teenage girl, I automatically was taken in by the cover. I automatically had to pick the book up and read what it was about. This book shocked me just by the first couple of paragraphs. If you want to be kept on your toes, need a good chick-lit or just want to enjoy reading overall, then this is the book for you.
Megan Abbot is an...more
Jenn
Full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.

I kept meaning to review this book but kept forgetting, that's how quickly it fell off my radar after I finally, midway through, decided to skip to the end.

Intensely disliked this book. The basic premise surrounds a couple of "mean girl" types and the way in which their relationships and dynamic change after they get a new cheerleading coach. Oh, there is also a whodunit mystery revolving around the death of an Army Sergeant recruiter dude. The resoluti...more
Layne
No one will ever love you as much as your girlfriends. This is the ongoing theme in Dare Me, a brilliant insight into the relationships girls have with other girls. Coaches, friends, teammates--every girl has a relationship with every other girl in their life, but how that living organism is expressed is what defines the characters in this novel.

Blurring lines of friendship and romance, the relationships the girls in this novel have far outweigh the meaningless affairs they have with men. This...more
Kim
If you can't stand those snooty high school cheerleader girls, don't read this book. It will make you crazy.

The characters are almost all shallow, selfish people. Typical teens? I SURE hope not! The entire book is based around cheer - at some points I really thought I would never be able to get into it. A book about cheerleaders sounded fun; this was anything BUT that! It was a dark, serious account of relationships, secrets, friendship, love, lust, cheating, social drinking......on and on. The...more
Stacy
For sheer originality and the way you feel encased in a bubble, just you and Addy telling you her story, I'm tempted to give it 5 stars. But at the same time, there's something so repulsive about what's related that it's hard to do so. (I think I had the same problem with Gone Girl.)

I picked this up because it was recommended on a B&N blog by Vicki Pettersson. I didn't have any well-defined expectations, but never would have expected this. Part crime novel, part psychological exploration, bu...more
Beverley Jones
An engrossing, dark tale of teenage obsession.

Abbott skilfully captures that time in a teen’s life when every smile, sneer or perceived slight is a cause for minute dissection. The world of cheerleading is alien to a UK reader but I think the power-play between the ‘top’ girls and underlings is vividly drawn.

The narrator is Addy, torn between the machinations of her ‘alpha girl’ friend Beth and their intriguing new coach which leads her into a whole lot of trouble. There is a sense of sinister...more
Kelly Davis
What is it about cheerleaders that so quickly and completely captures the attention of the entertainment-consuming American public? Is it the allure of the in-crowd? The wholesome pleated skirts with hemlines almost short enough to be naughty? The spectacle of physical agility in a series of synchronized backflips? All of the above?

In Dare Me, Megan Abbott tangles her squad of high school pom-pom shakers up in a scandal that would dissolve Kirsten Dunst and her Bring it On brethren into a glitte...more
Kelly
I can't even go far enough in this book to find out the premise. I do not even care. This is god awful. This is the worst kind of writing (edit: FINE. THE WORST KIND to me. I suppose you're allowed to like it). So many analogies that don't actually even MEAN ANYTHING. You can't just... say things... and call it writing.

"wishbone arms?" What do you mean by that? What is that? So, what? They're... all bowed out? They're skinny? They're dried out like after it comes out of a turkey and sits for a w...more
Kathleen Hagen
Dare Me, by Megan Abbott, a-minus, Narrated by Khristine Hvam, Produced by Hachette Audio, Downloaded from audible.com.

Addy Hamlon and Beth Cassidy have been best friends since gradeschool—Beth the leader, and Addy the follower. The girls are now juniors in highschool and have for the past three years belonged to “Cheer”, the cheerleaders squad. It’s a very competitive squad with precision maneuvers. This year, a new young coach is hired, Collette French, whom the girls call “Coach”. Beth has be...more
Florinda
Occasionally I feel like no matter how closely I'm reading a book, I'm missing something. It may be due to something in the writing style that's eluding me or an important element in the story that I don't quite understand for some reason, but regardless of what causes it, I feel as if I'm somehow a few steps behind. Sometimes I'll get to the end and still feel like I haven't caught up; it feels like waking up from a dream that I was trying to understand while dreaming it, and it's frustrating....more
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Megan Abbott is the Edgar® award-winning author of the novels The End of Everything Queenpin, The Song Is You, Die a Little, Bury Me Deep and her latest, Dare Me (July 2012).

Her writing has appeared in the New York Times, Salon, the Los Angeles Times Magazine, The Believer, Los Angeles Review of Books, Detroit Noir, Best Crime and Mystery Stories of the Year, Storyglossia, Queens Noir and The Spee...more
More about Megan Abbott...
The End of Everything Queenpin Die a Little Bury Me Deep The Song is You

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“There's something dangerous about the boredom of teenage girls.” 21 people liked it
“Because they do burn leaves here, the older folks do, and I remember now that I love it and always have. The way fall feels at night because of it, because of the crackling sound and walking around the sidewalks, like when you’re a kid, and kicking those soft piles, and seeing smoke from backyards and Mr. Kilstrap standing over the metal drum with the holes in the top, the sparking embers at his feet.” 3 people liked it
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