Reviewed by celinenyx on
On his first day at school Jeff meets ghost girl Kimberlee. She has died over a year ago, but can't pass on. To help he, he has to return all the stuff Kimberlee stole - a whole cave full.
It's not immediately clear from the blurb, but Life After Theft is written from the male view of Jeff. I think Ms Pike did a great job with the guy narrative, giving him enough emotions, but not making him as angsty as teenage girl voices usually are. His thoroughly a good guy, maybe a bit unbelievably so, but it worked in the book. Kimberlee is his opposite in everything. She's snarky, a liar, manipulative, incurable kleptomaniac and popular in school. I enjoyed their interactions and their bickering. Even though Jeff is a good guy, he doesn't let Kimberlee trample all over him.
As you might expect, Life After Theft has the same polished neatly-wrapped up shine Hollywood rom-coms have. Everything wraps up, every tread is followed up on, every character has a role in the bigger picture. It's something you either like or dislike - for me it worked, but it might not for everyone. There is no grittiness, and barely any meat to the story. There is a small attempt by Ms Pike to touch on metaphysical matters of the afterlife and purpose in life, but to be honest this was something I mostly ignored. In my opinion she didn't do a good job raising that sort of questions, and Jeff's whole "agnostic" thing wasn't very interesting to me.
If you enjoy teen flicks (nothing wrong with that, by the way), you will probably like Life After Theft too. There is almost no darkness, even though it touches upon subjects like drug addiction and bullying. It never dives deep into the effects of these, but it's not as if they're ignored either. Life After Theft is just a rather up-beat story for when you're sick of negativity.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 7 August, 2013: Finished reading
- 7 August, 2013: Reviewed