What to say about a book that's been the focus of so much adulation, but
 also mystified a sizeable proportion of its readership? So many people 
say: I just don't get it, don't like it, can't read it. The problem is 
that the two main characters, Nick and Amy, are seriously unlikeable. 
Not just not-my-type unlikeable, either. This is one totally messed-up 
weird twisted wreckage of a couple. Well, unlikeable's never bothered 
me. Some of the most interesting characters are villains. Heroes and 
heroines tend to be bland and dull and boringly good; give me a good 
villain any day.
The other big problem to overcome is the writing
 style, which can best be described as over-the-top aren't-I-clever? 
Both main characters are written in first person, so there's ample 
opportunity for snide abuse by the bucketload. Maybe ten per cent of it 
is incisively funny, the rest varies from meh to eye-rollingly bad to 
downright offensive. I dislike that kind of look-at-me cleverness, but 
enough of it was funny to get by, and all of it was in character, so 
it's hard to object to, I suppose.
The plot is that Nick and Amy 
have been forced by the recession to move from their sleek Manhattan 
lifestyle to a more modest life in Nick's hometown in Missouri. They 
both find the change difficult, the marriage begins to fall apart and 
then, on their fifth wedding anniversary, Amy disappears, leaving a 
stagily disorganised house, cleaned-up bloodstains and a great deal of 
other incriminating evidence pointing straight to Nick as a likely 
murder suspect. Since we are inside Nick's head a lot of the time, we 
know there's more to it than it appears.
I don't want to say too 
much about how the plot develops, because there are more twists than a 
bag of pretzels, and I don't want to spoil the surprises. However, the 
main twist at the halfway point was one I saw coming almost from the 
start, which added some interest to the early part of the book. It's 
always fun to appreciate both the obvious surface viewpoint, and the 
inside perspective that illuminates the behind-the-scenes manipulation. 
After that reveal, the pace ramps up and this part was, for me, 
unputdownable.
And then the ending. Again, it's one I saw coming.
 It seemed almost inevitable, although I hoped right to the last minute 
that there would be some big twist to force things off in a more 
interesting direction. There was a small twist, I suppose, so the way in
 which the ending was achieved was unexpected, but the actual situation 
was as I'd foreseen. Sorry to be so cryptic, but I really don't want to 
spoil this for anyone. 
For anyone looking for deeper meaning in a
 psychological thriller, there's interest in the way the whole story was
 handled in the public eye, on TV, on the internet, through talk shows 
and to-camera interviews. The police investigation was gradually 
overshadowed by the global media take-up of Nick and Amy's story, and 
the way they were manipulated by the various factions involved. This 
isn't a particularly original line to take, but it was handled well 
here.
Ultimately, even though I didn’t expect to, I'd have to 
admit I enjoyed this. The plotting was clever, the way the book was 
structured, with alternating Nick and Amy chapters, was clever, the 
writing was clever and sometimes downright witty. Even knowing where 
things were going much of the time, I was still on the edge of my seat 
at the way the plot screeched round corners and made abrupt u-turns. I'd
 have put this at four stars but the ending was disappointing in its 
lack of proper resolution. Leaving things in unstable and potentially 
explosive equilibrium isn't very satisfying, although perhaps it's 
appropriate. So three stars.
         
I read this some months back. I found it gripping, but with an increasingly implausible plot, and have no desire to reread it (for me the mark of an excellent book). I worried about the ending.
ReplyDeleteYes, I know a lot of people liked the ending but I wasn't comfortable with it at all. This was a bookgroup read for me, and I was in the minority in actually liking it (and finishing it!). Most of the group found it 'too American' (they said).
DeleteHad never thought of the perspective of someone with a personality disorder. This completely changed how I will think of that diagnosis forever. The story is powerful and the promise of recovery is inspiring. Definitely would recommend to read to expand your world.
ReplyDeleteAya,
Highland Mills Maid Service visit site