Tabbi doesn’t want to be heading to rehab. Sure, it’s in the Swiss mountains and, because of her privileged upbringing (though very estranged) and family wealth, would be more of a luxurious stay than your standard rehab. The sights might be nice. But, still—Tabbi doesn’t want to go. She’s not ready to face the things she’s done back home that led to this solution. Chaotic and brazen, she befriends another girl on the train heading to her destination. Ruby is very different to Tabbi. Heading to unknown locations to travel and explore sounds much nicer to Tabbi than where she’s headed, whereas Ruby thinks being Tabbi, heading to guaranteed luxury, sounds much more inviting than her plans. So, in a slightly unorthodox and underhanded way, Tabbi suggests that maybe they should swap places. Ruby could become her, and she should become normal-Ruby.
But Ruby is far from normal. Tabbi doesn’t realise this at first, of course, and long after they have altered their appearances by cutting their hair and swapping perfumes and outfits, even passports. Becoming Ruby for Tabbi is easy, for a while, although she wasn’t prepared for tent-living and making a small paycheck to get by until the girls swap back places at their set time. Only, when a boy finds Tabbi, using the name Ruby, she’s dumbfounded at the things her swapped-persona has done. No wonder she willingly went along—was this even an idea of Tabbi’s? Who really is the girl whose identity she has taken on? Through searches, confessions and snippets of the girl’s lives, the truth of Ruby’s past and Tabbi’s secret comes back to haunt them both—each paying for the pain of one another. But at the end of it, are they both willing to give up the new lives they created as each other, or will the alluring pull of a fresh start be the end of their old selves?
Overall, The Other Girl was continually gripping, suspensefully captivating from start to finish. Having two unreliable narrators was quite the tantalising experience, and it really sets up the cycle of keeping the drama unravelling all the way through which definitely made me want to keep turning pages late into the night. I adored the character development in this. Tabbi stood out for me, and I love that the book weighs into the consequences and accountability of owning our pasts. Emily’s writing paints an action-packed escapade through Europe, complicated lies and fabricated bygones. There is so much to love in this story, and it feels authentically fresh in the mystery genre. I think this will even appeal to book lovers who aren’t usually YA readers, too. I’m so excited to read more from Emily—an all-round amazing book!