You by Caroline Kepnes

You (You, #1)

by Caroline Kepnes

Gone Girl meetsFatal Attractionin Caroline Kepnes' You, a chilling account of the twisted psychology behind unrelenting passion.

When aspiring writer Guinevere Beck strides into the bookstore where Joe works he is instantly smitten. Beck is everything Joe has ever wanted: tough, razor-smart and sexier than his wildest dreams. He'd kill to have her.

Soon Beck can't resist her feelings for a guy who seems custom made for her. When a string of macabre incidents tears her world apart there is only one person she can turn to. But there's more to Joe than Beck realises and much more to Beck than her perfect facade. The obsessive relationship quickly spirals into a whirlwind of deadly consequences...

A chilling account of unrelenting, terrifying deceit, Caroline Kepnes' You is a thriller more perversely clever and dangerously twisted than any YOU have ever read.

Reviewed by laurie on

3 of 5 stars

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I liked this book and I hated this book. It was creepy as hell in a great way - the kind of creepy I actually wanted [b:The Circle|18302455|The Circle|Dave Eggers|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1376419833s/18302455.jpg|25791820] to be - and why I tend to shy away from social media. I couldn't, however, get past the fact that Beck was a complete and total moron. She loses her phone and never thinks to change her password? Or hit the button Gmail has right on the home page to sign out all other computers that are logged in?

And that's why I hated this book. Why was Beck the object of Joe's obsession? What was it about her, other than she walked into his store and bought a couple of books? She treated him like garbage, she lied, she ignored him, and he panted over her like a dog with a slab of bacon. Was it physical - we were never told. It certainly wasn't intellectual - her emails and tweets showed her to be nothing but a shallow, selfish little girl. This deeper connection, this understanding of why Beck was the mouse in Joe's house, would have made this book all the creepier.

It also wouldn't have hurt for a good editing - the book was just too long and went on longer than it needed to. But if you want to be creeped out and prompted to change every password and lock down every one of your online accounts, this book will do the trick.

See this review and others on my blog.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 21 May, 2017: Finished reading
  • 21 May, 2017: Reviewed