3.75 stars 🌟🌟🌟🔅🔅
First off, a big thank you to the author Haya Sameer for sending me this book to read in exchange for an honest review
Now I have to admit that I struggled a bit with this one, but knowing that the writer was 15 years old when she published it (making her 17 yrs now! WOW) changed my perspective.
I mean at 15 I was still struggling writing descriptive, narrative, and expository essays!!!
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So this definetly contributed to the rating
⚜Genre: Crime/Thriller
⚜Theme: Stalker - Revenge
⚜Target: Upper YA
⚜Characters: Cassidy and a number of her friends and family
⚜TW: a lot! violence- kidnapping - torturing - killing
⚜ tropes: This is not a romance in any shape or form
⚜ POV: mainly Cassidy with a few scattered different POVs
⚜ rating: 3.75 stars 🌟🌟🌟🔅🔅
⚜standalone: It could be, but everything is not resolved at the end
⚜Ending: setting the mood for the next book
⚜Edition: Only Paperback
Cassidy Carlone was held captive and tortured by a deranged kidnapper after he or she toyed with her mind and spirit for a long time. One incident of his/her manipulation resulted in her father's death which Cassidy blamed herself for. Cassidy escapes, goes into therapy, and tries to live her teenage life in a new city and school. But fate is cruel for apparently, she lands back again in the hands of her obsessed kidnapper. Cassidy has to find out who is playing with her life before more people die.
I loved the story. I was immediately intrigued by Cassidy's story wanting to know who has been doing that to her.
I loved seeing her going from the timid victim to the strong survivor who takes charge of her destiny and decides to expose the identity of her kidnapper and tormentor.
I also enjoyed, in a dark weird way, the flashbacks to the days before and when Cassidy was kidnapped. They gave certain clues to the identity of the kidnapper.
The writing structure of the book shows that the author has excellently mastered the English language. She is apparently not a native but clearly studied well. there were almost no grammar mistakes - some would mistake the use of commas and connectors as mistakes, but when writing a book, you could take lenience with them.
However, it is this same writing style that put me off and was the reason it took me a long time to finish the book.
The paragraphs were overly descriptive with the use of difficult vocabulary that would be impossible to be used in real dialogues or situations like the ones in the book.
boisterous, exuberant, aberrant, hellacious, interminable
Maybe this was ok in the times of Arthur Conan Doyle, but I do not think the targeted audience will resonate with such writing
a lot of the times I felt that the author was deliberately avoiding using pronouns.
she would be talking about something Cassidy would be doing then continue by the brunette said.. or the bookworm observed..
at some point you had to remember each person's eye color to understand who was talking to whom
oceanic eyes....cornflower eyes..
I am not saying some people won't like that, but even for an English language educator such as myself I found this over the top.
"Auburn fingers pulled back long chocolate brown strands, the smooth locks forming a ponytail before she tied it back with a grey scrunchie. The monochrome accessory...
how can fingers be Auburn? and do we need a detailed description of everything? and this is just one example
Sometimes less is more
The other thing that set me back was the overstretched of unnecessary events in some parts versus the sudden and rushed incidents close to the end. I think some parts could have been deleted and others more explained.
my final advice is to do a thorough research. If you are to use the juridical system in a certain country, you need to research well how it works, how long a trial takes, the procedures before going into a trial, and stuff like that.
Overall, I see great potential in this young author
Just imagine that if she was able to write a book by the age of 15, what else would she be doing?
the world is her oyster.