Leah
Written on Jun 18, 2017
Alvina Knightly is not someone you necessarily want to be, the way you sometimes read a character and you think, “Oh, I’d love their life.” You don’t want Alvina’s life. She’s living in a grotty flat, with the slobs; she’s just been fired from her job and she is very much the neglected, unloved twin, compared to her sister Elizabeth. Elizabeth is the shining star, with a husband and a kid and tons of money, and she’s so desperate for Alvina to visit, she’s willing to pay her air fares (score!). But once Alvina gets there she knows something’s up – and when Elizabeth ends up dead, Alvina sees no other option but to slip into her sister’s perfect life, and have everything she feels like she was ought to have had herself…
Mad is completely bonkers. It’s high-octane, fast-paced, filled with unforgettable characters, lead by Alvina who loves Taylor Swift (good enough for me!) and wants to marry Channing Tatum. She’s got a filthy mouth, a filthy mind and that’s not even the half of it. Even I was surprised by everything that went on in this book, it is literally an action-movie-that’s-actually-a-book. Who doesn’t dream of being somebody else? I would love to be Taylor Swift. Or anyone, really, who’s rich and skinny and famous. Even just rich and skinny would do. So when Elizabeth dies, why wouldn’t Alvina jump into her life? Why wouldn’t she try to steal back everything she think Elizabeth stole in the first place? Mind you, she has no idea what she’s getting herself into, jumping into Elizabeth’s shoes. Even I was surprised, it’s so completely unrealistic, but so completely compulsive and readable and epic.
I cannot wait for Bad and Dangerous To Know. I can’t wait for more madcap adventures with Alvina, with a side of murder for good measure. This is exactly what women’s fiction needs to give it a breath of fresh air after years of same old, same old. This is breaking the mould, and Alvina is so refreshingly honest, the kind of honest I miss from Gemma Burgess (who has disappeared into the ether *weeps forever*). I love authors who step out of the boundaries, who write something completely different to what you expect and do it well. Esposito has knocked it out of the park. The plot, the characters, the Sicilian setting (which, despite everything that happens, makes me wish I could go live in Elizabeth’s villa… Priorities, right?), it all added up to a fabulous, unputdownable book. This is an amazing start to what will likely become one of my favourite book trilogies. You NEED this book in your life, stat.