Thirteen-year-old Lizzie Hood and her next-door neighbor, Evie Verver, are inseparable, best friends who swap clothes, bathing suits, and field-hockey sticks and between whom, presumably, there are no secrets.
Then one afternoon, Evie disappears, and as a rabid, giddy panic spreads through the balmy suburban community, everyone turns to Lizzie for answers. Was Evie unhappy, troubled, or upset? Had she mentioned being followed? Would she have gotten into the car of a stranger?
Megan Abbott has a strange skill of making words on a page seem like something much more - this entire book read like a fever-dream, a weird trance that you can't seem to look away from. With a gritty, hard-hitting story and deeply unreliable narrator that makes you question everything around you.
Deeply uncomfortable and dark, this story had plenty of thought-provoking and shocking moments, although there were points I was far too uncomfortable to continue - there was a lot of implied sexualisation, sometimes incestuous, of these young girls and questionable situations even in context of this disturbing novel.
⭐⭐⭐
About The Author:
www.meganabbott.com
Twitter @meganeabbott
Instagram @melizaabbott


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