Regina's Reviews > The Likeness

The Likeness by Tana French

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If you are looking for a happy ending, a lover’s conclusion or a pat and satisfying ending to a mystery then a Tana French novel is not for you. However, if you are interested in reading about human relationships that are so deep and well developed that it feels like you can touch them, see them or have experienced them then I recommend The Likeness (and Tana French’s first in this series In the Woods). Ms. French has a knack for painting friendships and human interactions in such a way that I literally want to crawl inside the book and be part of the interaction.
In The Likeness, the main character is Cassie Maddox. We first met Cassi as she was portrayed in the novel In the Woods. At the start of The Likeness, Cassie is recovering both emotionally and career wise from the results and the conclusions of a case that ended badly - -both perosnally and career wise. For those who have read In the Woods, Ms. French created a hauntingly tight bond between partners Rob and Cassie. During The Likeness, Cassie often thinks of Rob and longs for that closeness again. This longing for intimacy leaves Cassie vulnerable.

The focus of The Likeness is crazy and improbable, the murder is sort of easy to figure out – but that is not the point The Likeness and it does not lessen the impact of this book. Readers read Tana French for her rich characters and psychological thrilles. What is the point of this novel is Cassie’s relationship with the four main suspects and further, these supsects' relationships with each other. What French has done, is taken an ideal of intimacy and friendship and multiplied it times 10. In truth, I hope at one point in everyone’s life they have experienced such a close bond that Ms. French describes between the the characters in this book (Rafe, Daniel, Justin, and Abby). To read this book is in part nostalgic, at least for me, it made me remember college roommates, living abroad and doing nothing else but focusing on my friendships

It isn't a secret and Ms. French doesn't hide it. We can all see the train wreck coming, we know the end is there (Cassie knows the end is coming too) but the manner in which Ms. French expertly crafts the friendship and bonds of Rafe, Daniel, Justin and Abby made me (and Cassie) never want the end to happen. The beautiful thing about The Likeness ending is that readers still have Faithful Place and Broken Harbour by Tana French to read. But there is little good about a Tana French book ending; it just makes me said there isn't another 200 or 300 pages.

I listened to the narration of this book and it was done beautifully by an Irish narrator, who seemed to my uneducated ears to be able to catch and portray the various accents realistically. I highly recommend this book.

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Quotes Regina Liked

Tana French
“Our entire society is based on discontent. People wanting more and more and more. Being constantly dissatisfied with their homes, their bodies, their décor, their clothes, everything – taking it for granted that that’s the whole point of life. Never to be satisfied. If you are perfectly happy with what you got, especially if what you got isn’t even all the spectacular then you’re dangerous. You’re breaking all the rules. You’re undermining the sacred economy. You’re challenging every assumption that society is built on.”
Tana French, The Likeness


Reading Progress

01/13/2011
5.0% "I am really enjoying this, more than the first. I like that it is being told from Cassie's POV, rather than Rob's (who is not in this book)."
01/14/2011
20.0% "so far this narration is fantastic, a beautiful irish accent, wonderful performance. And I am enjoying Cassie's remberance of Rob from book #1 - -b/c I can't stop thinking about Rob and Cassie from book #1." 5 comments
01/15/2011
40.0% "Just loving this story. Tana French has an amazing talent of writing relationships between people and their dynamics. It is what I loved about Into the Woods and it is even moreso present in this book."
01/17/2011
50.0% "Our entire society is based on discontent. People wanting more and more and more. Being constantly dissatisfied with their homes, their bodies, their décor, their clothes, everything – taking it for granted that that’s the whole point of life. Never to be satisfied."
01/17/2011
50.0% "Never to be satisfied. If you are perfectly happy with what you got, especially if what you got isn’t even all the spectacular then you’re dangerous. You’re breaking all the rules. You’re undermining the sacred economy. You’re challenging every assumption that society is built on."
01/19/2011
50.0% "Train wreck coming. Hasn't the plot device of a detective (much less an undercover one!) not sharing all pertinent info with her partner/supervisor been exhausted?"
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Comments (showing 1-5 of 5) (5 new)

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message 1: by Regina (new) - added it

Regina Hunter Weird, seeing you rating stuff, keep thinking "I didn't read that, oh its not me."


Regina I do the same thing with your posts!


message 3: by Regina (new) - added it

Regina Hunter Awwww


message 4: by Sandra (new)

Sandra I saw that you liked this better than the first. Do these have to be read in order or can 'The Likeness' be read as a stand alone?


Regina Cassie (the main character) in The Likeness is pretty traumatized by what happened both professionally and personally in the first one, so it is probably best to do them in order. But, the main story line has nothing to do with #1, so if you are willing to go with what the author is saying how she feels (she recaps in terms of its effects on her), then you likely would be okay.


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