Insanity by Susan Vaught

Insanity

by Susan Vaught

The intertwining stories of three teenagers who find themselves haunted beyond imagining in the depths of a Kentucky mental institution.

In intertwining stories, three teenagers find themselves haunted beyond imagining in the depths of a Kentucky mental institution. The plot contains profanity and violence.

Reviewed by Angie on

2 of 5 stars

Share
I received an ARC through NetGalley.

Insanity is one big ol' jumbled mess. The cover and blurb make it sound super creepy and interesting, but it's just not. Well, it started off weird and creepy and I was into it, but then it changed, and I wasn't liking it anymore. I can't even explain what the story was about, other than a group of "special" people fighting ghosts in an old psychiatric hospital. There's a lot more going on than that, but the narrative was so jumpy that I couldn't keep up. The description is actually just the first quarter of the book. The rest is completely different.

Insanity starts off with Forest working her first double shift at the hospital. She's an orphan who just got out of the foster system and she really needs this job. That night was super creepy! Forest is seeing and hearing things and she can't tell whether it's real or not. Then she loses a whole two hours! Needless to say that didn't go over well with her boss, especially since Forest can't explain what happened without sounding crazy herself. Of course, she learns from one of the "ghosts" that she's special and she goes to visit someone who's like her in order to learn about her abilities. Then the story shifts to something else entirely.

Next we meet Darius who's a new security guard at the hospital. His first shift is the tunnels under the hospital. He starts hearing stuff, too, but this time it's the song "Pop Goes the Weasel." There's also a missing child, and Darius is the grandson of a child serial killer who he believes may be back from the dead and has the little boy. This is super scary and weird stuff, but this gets resolved quite quickly before the focus of Insanity shifts yet again to Darius' girlfriend!

Trina is a witch, her father is a pastor and a witch, and her step-mom can use powers but isn't a witch. Okay...well...her father believes it's his mission to rid the world of the people who are special and can talk to ghosts or whatever. If you guess that this magically gets resolved before switching POV again, you would be correct. Insanity ends with Levi, who we met in the prologue and by this point I was over it. This is not how multiple POV should be done. It was very episodic and I couldn't become invested since the story changed focus so much!

In the end, I didn't like Insanity. The psychiatric hospital in a small town in the middle of nowhere is an amazing setting with a ton of potential, but the author simply didn't take advantage of it. I don't have the slightest clue what the plot was suppose to be, and it didn't help that time didn't pass in a linear fashion as characters moved between words. It was just confusing and jumpy.

Read more of my reviews at Pinkindle Reads & Reviews.

Last modified on

Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 9 February, 2014: Finished reading
  • 9 February, 2014: Reviewed