Photo de l'auteur

Maggie Thrash

Auteur de Honor Girl: A Graphic Memoir

6 oeuvres 746 utilisateurs 51 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de Maggie Thrash

Honor Girl: A Graphic Memoir (2015) 481 exemplaires
We Know It Was You (Strange Truth) (2016) 98 exemplaires
Lost Soul, Be at Peace (2018) 98 exemplaires
Rainbow Black: A Novel (2024) 26 exemplaires
Strange Truth (2017) 23 exemplaires
Strange Lies (2017) 20 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
20th century
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Agent
Stephen Barr (Writers House)

Membres

Critiques

This novel based on and set amid the Satanic Panic of the 80's and 90's is hilarious and ghoulish—snortingly funny, in a way that made me feel somewhat guilty. It's audacious, uproarious, uncompromisingly queer, and macabre, like an R-rated Addams Family. There are lines I am still snickering at a month later, which somewhat lightens the horrors I can never unread. Rainbow Black's prose is unflinching, in every way, staring down grisly horror, dreadful abuse and negligence, and ghastly, cringeworthy precocious adolescence. Only you can decide which is the most traumatic!… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
bibliovermis | 1 autre critique | Mar 14, 2024 |
Representation: Black character
Trigger warnings: Disappearance and death of a cat, racism, slavery and abuse mentioned, blood depiction, emesis, child neglect, depression
Score: Six points out of ten.
Find this review on The StoryGraph.

I saw Lost Soul, Be at Peace, hiding on a library shelf, so I wanted to read it. Soon enough, I picked it up and read it, but when I finished the novel, I realised a few aspects of the book. First, it was part of a series, but unfortunately, the library didn't have the first instalment, Hono[u]r Girl. However, at its best, Lost Soul, Be at Peace was disorienting--the text was underwhelming at worst.

It starts with the first person I see, Maggie Thrash, living in a mansion a year and a half after an event I don't know much of. She recounts her life thus far as uneventful and even depressing as she isn't doing too well in 11th grade, and to top everything off, her cat disappeared. Maggie spends the opening pages searching for that feline when she stumbles across another ghostly character, Tommy. I can understand why Maggie is depressed because her parents neglect her, but she also talks about how her coming out has gone unnoticed, which rubbed me the wrong way. It's like she wants attention from that. I couldn't connect or relate to any of the characters, and the story does not make an outstanding memoir because it's too monotonous. The conclusion is a high note, but petered out Lost Soul, Be at Peace. I don't know anyone who has Hono[u]r Girl yet, so I'll never know what happened there.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Law_Books600 | 14 autres critiques | Feb 20, 2024 |
These 5 starts may have as much to do with how much of a crush I have on the author as how much I liked the book.
 
Signalé
mslibrarynerd | 30 autres critiques | Jan 13, 2024 |
Good memoir about the author discovering her sexuality while at Summer Camp. Simplistic art style which I personally liked a lot. Characters could have been a little more memorable though — I coud tell them apart, but couldn't remember their identities (a bit odd). While sympathetic, I didn't find the main character very likeable, which was pretty refreshing. Could nitpick on a few minor story-telling issues, but there's lots to enjoy.
 
Signalé
thisisstephenbetts | 30 autres critiques | Nov 25, 2023 |

Listes

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Statistiques

Œuvres
6
Membres
746
Popularité
#34,063
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
51
ISBN
23

Tableaux et graphiques