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Chargement... The Cellar (2014)par Natasha Preston
Chargement...
Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. At times this reminded me of Criminal Minds, which I love, and at other times it reads like a Lifetime movie. We get 3 main POVs in here; Summer/Lily (who was kidnapped), Collin/Clover (the kidnapper), and Lewis (Summer's boyfriend). For the most part the book was engaging and kept me wanting to turn the pages. There were a couple times (Lewis or Collin's chapters) when I wanted to skip ahead, but overall I didn't want to put this down. This book is pretty cliché and uses a lot of familiar tropes, but what kept me reading was wanting to find out how Summer was going to escape. Like I said it's cliché and predictable and reads like a Lifetime movie, so I knew she'd eventually escape that's not a surprise, but I wanted to know HOW she'd do it. That being said, the climax and ending were very underwhelming. It felt like it ended way too quick and it wasn't even clear how it happened. Also, I wanted to see more of the investigative side of this case and less trips down the characters memory lanes. I feel like it might have been better if we could have had the POV of a detective working this case. They could have replaced Lewis' POV with the detective's; I honestly don't think his POV adds much to the story anyway. Overall, it was OK, kept me engaged, but underwhelmed where it actually matters. ( ) This book would have been so much shorter if it didn't repeat the same things over and over again. It's so repetitive and the story feels contrived. After I got to chapter 6, I ended up skimming through the rest. I could jump over several paragraphs and not miss a thing. Once I got towards the end of the book, it got a little better but not much. The flashback chapters were completely irrelevant. I was happy once I finished the book which is why it gets a 1 star from me. Summer is a 16-year-old who's kidnapped by a man who calls himself Clover. Clover renames her "Lily" and tells her that she is now his family, along with three young women who he has named Poppy, Rose, and Violet. The four of them live in the cellar of Clover's home, entirely dependent upon him. Although his behavior is initially relatively predictable, over the next few months of Summer's captivity he becomes more and more unstable. Meanwhile, Lewis, Summer's boyfriend, and Summer's friends and family are all looking for her, refusing to give up hope that she might still be alive. This was a quick read, but not really a very good one. Emotionally, it was very one-note. It alternated between views of the present and past, from Clover, Lewis, and Summer's POVs (first person, present tense). Many scenes could easily have been cut - they didn't contribute anything new to the story or characters that previous scenes hadn't already done. Yes, we get it, Lewis and Summer are teenagers but they're absolutely in love and would never stop hoping to be together again. Yes, Clover has Mommy issues and separates women into two categories, "whore" and "pure." There was a lot of violence - shortly after Summer was added to Clover's "family," she witnessed him stab a woman to death. And while I'm not generally someone who clamors for more gore, after the third or fourth time Clover simply stabbed someone in the stomach and they instantly died, I started wishing Preston would either make the deaths off-page or start doing something different with them. The rape, thankfully, was off-page. While I could understand why Summer thought and acted the way she did, it still annoyed me. Immediately after ending up in the cellar, she put herself in a mental group separate from Rose and Poppy, who she repeatedly described as acting like they didn't want to leave. This lasted for months, even after a new person was added to the "family," tried to enlist Summer's help to escape, and Summer did nothing right along with Poppy and Rose when the new girl made her attempt. It never seemed to occur to her that it wasn't that Rose and Poppy didn't want to leave (although Rose's three years in the cellar definitely messed her up) but that they couldn't see any other way to survive. Eventually, I saw Summer's "I'm different from those girls who don't really want to leave" attitude as a way of reassuring herself that she wasn't breaking, but it was still frustrating to see those thoughts repeated over and over. The ending felt unfinished. Several characters' stories were wrapped up off-page. It felt weirdly unreal, like the author was going to jump out with a last second twist. Really, though, there were no twists here, and very little that even qualified as a surprise. (Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.) aucune critique | ajouter une critique
For months, Summer is trapped in a cellar with the man who took her and three other girls: Rose, Poppy, and Violet. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)823.92Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 2000-Classification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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