What first attracted me to The Poison Apples when I saw it sitting on a table in a discount book store, was the book’s design. The cover is gorgeous and eye-catching, the title is great, and the edges of the pages are a bright red. After the reading the synopsis and discovering that this was a loose fairytale retelling (very, very loose with no particular tale in mind), I knew I had to have it. The Poison Apples was a lot of fun and definitely worth the read, but didn’t wow me like I wanted it to.
The Poison Apples is told from three different perspectives: Alice, Reena, and Molly, all unlucky girls with evil stepmothers. This, I think, is truly the book’s downfall. Don’t get me wrong, though. The voices for each girl were executed very well and they all sounded very different. But with such a short book and such heavy subject matter, I think the story would have been stronger if Archer had picked just one girl to narrate the book. That way, more development of character and plot could have been devoted to her and I wouldn’t have felt so underwhelmed by the ending.
The book follows the girls’ first semester at a New England boarding school. Alice and Reena were sent away from their homes by their stepmothers, and Molly got in on a scholarship and decided to enroll so she could get away from her own crazy family. Nothing particularly mature happens, but there were a lot of cringe-worthy, I-am-embarassed-for-you scenes, and hilarious one-liners. For such a quick, small book, The Poison Apples does explore a lot of territory: loss of a parent to cancer, bullying, racism, friendship, forgiveness, mental illness, and even inappropriate teacher-student relationships. Of course, I felt like more attention could have been given to all of it, but with the way the author decided to write her novel, that would have been impossible.
The Poison Apples was obviously not the perfect book. It was lacking in some areas, but with a delicious voice, laugh-out-loud scenes, and quirky characters, it is definitely worth the read.