Reviewed by ccbookwitch on
- The setting was really vivid. Usually, I find that contemporary novel's settings are unimportant and interchangeable and that the story could happen anywhere and be the same. With MONDAY, the author's depiction of the Washington, DC setting really added to the book and the suspense. Her descriptions covered not only what each part of DC that is in the book looked like, but also the politics behind DC including especially gentrification, mixed in with bits about DC history, most prominently the parts about go-go music.
- Claudia was a fully developed character. Obviously you'd hope that the protagonist of a novel is well-developed, but in most stories I've read that focus on a best friend or another character, the person narrating the story can often get left behind in terms of characterization. I liked that even though Monday was super important to the story, we still knew more about Claudia from just her personality to her nail painting talent to the unique way she saw things and people as colors. Claudia's character was complex and nuanced in ways that made the story all the more rich and interesting to read.
- The relationships were all unique and complex. Something else that made the story great was that even though it is focused on Claudia's friendship with Monday, other relationships in her life were still deeply explored. My favorite was her relationship with her and Monday's teacher, Ms. Valente. It was also great to see a positive, supportive family in a YA book, since YA can get a little absentee-parent-y at times.
- I didn't like one of the twists. I really dislike it when a character's mental health becomes a plot twist in a book. I feel like it's a really cheap storytelling device that's also pretty problematic and insensitive to people with mental illness. This particular plot twist also didn't feel needed because there were so many other twists and honestly it was suspenseful and shocking enough without anything added.
- I wished Claudia and Monday's relationship had been portrayed as more complex. Before Monday disappears, there is an incident that does complicate her relationship with Claudia, but it is not extensively explored. I think Jackson was trying to show readers that Claudia might not have known Monday as well as she thought, but I wish that was more fully explored throughout the entire story so we got hints of it all along and not just through other characters in the book.
- The final reveal is shocking. The whole story is obviously building up to Claudia finding out what really happened to Monday, and to avoid spoilers, all I will say is that the ending is disturbing and shocking and is the exact opposite of anticlimactic.
All in all this was a very impressive sophomore novel from a very impressive author who I will for sure be reading more of. Tiffany D. Jackson's books deserve SO MUCH HYPE and I will recommend them forever to anyone looking for thrillers with a little something different.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 16 November, 2018: Finished reading
- 16 November, 2018: Reviewed