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But both of them really were entertaining and I was laughing at their flaws and at how they tried to outwit the other to the point of doing the unimaginable. At the end of the story, I was laughing at how their marriage ironically got fixed by one sick web of lies, traps, deception, even murder. Boy, if that’s how failing marriages were fixed, no wonder many couples opt to choose divorce.
The manner of writing for me is really creative and witty as the author used two points of view, no-not just two but three- Nick’s point of view, Amy’s point of view through her diary and the real Amy’s point of view.
I don’t know, but I really liked the use of the dark and twisted humor, it just made the characters and the entire story more sensible.
Amy kind of reminds me of Margo of Paper Towns but only because of the clues to finding something stuff. In Amy’s case, her treasure hunt gave Nick clues to discovering not only Amy’s anniversary gift, but also discovering who Amy really is, who he really is and what they really mean to each other.



My only issue was that when she changed her plan, it seemed like it should have raised more suspicion.


Hi. With the baby on the way, do you think there's a chance Amy and even Nick will become somehow better people?


Perhaps she was still the Diary Amy from the beginning, the diary is only a tool to conceal her true agenda and to make her plan seems more believable by making use of the stretched course of time. She truly snapped after seeing Andie, but she wants to use her diary to hide the fact and make it obvious that Nick is the one distancing from her through the course of time and thus making him the bad guy. I believe she is still the sweet-hearted Amy before Nicj's affair.
Hope this helps.

Good questions. I guess I see Amy as flawed on a cellular level: I'm not sure she is capable of change. Nick...well, maybe he'll step up. I can imagine that the baby will become Amy's next prop, but I wonder if she will be willing to share the attention?


Thank you for sharing your well opinionated views. :) But maybe we'll never really know unless the author writes a sequel. :)
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Nick and Amy Dunne, a couple thought to be so perfect for each other, find themselves on the complete opposite ends of the spectrum once they make the move to Missouri. Since the author doesn’t really focus much on the time the spent being married, while living in New York, we cannot get a full understanding of where things started to go downhill. Even though the story concentrates on Amy’s disappearance, I would have encouraged a little more information on the couple beforehand, instead of what you get from Amy’s diaries.
From here on, we get to see numerous lies from Nick, and a peek into the twisted mind of his wife Amy. “The truth will set you free” is not a quote that Nick would have choked on. And for Amy, a true mastermind when it comes to the art of payback.