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Wednesday, August 14, 2019

Confessions by Kanae Minato

ConfessionsConfessions by Kanae Minato
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This review might contain spoilers.
I bought this book as soon as I read the premise, because it was just too intriguing. A teacher’s little daughter has been killed by her students and she seeks revenge. It sounded interesting and the beginning did capture my interest, but the more I read the more I rolled my eyes. There was too much of everything in one short book. How come there were so many sociopaths and bullies in a single class of 13 y.o. kids? And not just the kids: there were 3 mothers in the book and all 3 were weird in one way or the other. One was abusive, the other dotted on her kid too much and in the end decided to kill him and herself, and the third, the teacher, starts a revenge which results in the death of an innocent student, but she doesn’t even feel guilty. Not in the least. She does something else in the end, which again was just too unbelievable. I know that grief might drive people to madness, but that was too much.
Also, one of the evil kids was too genius, the other too stupid. In the age of internet and technology, a 13 y.o boy in Japan doesn’t think about testing his blood at a lab or googling AIDS which he thinks he has contacted? Not plausible. As for the genius, he was smart but also an idiot to tell of his evil plan on his website. Oh well...
A lot of things in this book were implausible and if I start writing about everything that bugged me, this will become a very long review.
As I said, the premise was interesting, but I was expecting something else. I don’t know, something more serious. This book read like a young adult revenge story, not an adult thriller.


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Tuesday, August 6, 2019

Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes

Flowers for AlgernonFlowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

A book that broke my heart. Turned my world upside down. Made me a better person.
And isn’t it amazing that a single book can do so many things to you, break your heart and mend it, then shatter it again and squeeze the blood out of the shards? Someone might say, “it’s just a book, it can’t do so many things.” And I’ll tell them, “go read it yourself and tell me you’re still the same person.”
In the last decades whenever someone would ask me what was my favorite book, I wouldn’t know which one to name. I’ve read so many fantastic books and each of them has given me something, and it’s always hard to pick just one. Well, I know now that if I get asked that same question, I will always think of “Flowers for Algernon.”
Thank you Daniel Keyes for giving me this lesson on humanity.


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Shutter Island by Dennis Lehane

Shutter IslandShutter Island by Dennis Lehane
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This was such an interesting story, but so unbelievable. Everything was great: the writing, the pace, the characters, but I can’t make myself believe that the doctors and the whole asylum would go to such lengths. Guess I can’t suspend disbelief that much, because the truth was just too unbelievable for me.
And still, this was suspense at its best, when you feel that something’s wrong, but you can’t quite put your finger on it. I hadn’t watched the movie so I went into the book knowing only that there’s some kind of twist in the end. I took the wrong path at first, thinking that Teddy’s partner was never there and just his imagination, but because the other characters were interacting with the partner, I stopped suspecting something was wrong there. The author fooled me nicely and I loved it.
I recommend this book if you haven’t watched the movie. But then, read it nevertheless: it was so well written :)


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