Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea by April Genevieve Tucholke

Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea

by April Genevieve Tucholke

Faded Gatsby glamour and thrilling gothic horror meet in this gorgeously told, terrifying and dreamy YA romance.

'You stop fearing the devil when you're holding his hand...'

Nothing much exciting rolls through Violet White's sleepy, seaside town...until River West comes along. River rents the guesthouse behind Violet's crumbling estate, and as eerie, grim things start to happen, Violet begins to wonder about the boy living in her backyard. Is River just a crooked-smiling liar with pretty eyes and a mysterious past? Violet's grandmother always warned her about the Devil, but she never said he could be a dark-haired boy who likes coffee and who kisses you in a cemetery... Violet's already so knee-deep in love, she can't see straight. And that's just how River likes it.

Reviewed by nitzan_schwarz on

3 of 5 stars

Share
So... I'm going to donate this novel soon. My relationship with this novel was very complicated. I liked it, but I didn't, and then I felt they I had to like it, so I tried making everything (even the bad things) sound positive. I made "I both passionately hated it and fiercely loved it at the same time" sound like a good thing, when it isn't. I have no idea why.

This book has a lot of problematic things about it. Things that made me shy away from reading its sequel, and will forever keep me from doing that.

But, I did really enjoy the writing, and the creepiness (and the names!) and the whole vibe of the novel, and where I didn't fall in love, someone else might. Therefore - the library treatment for it. Or I might give it to my cousin, we'll see.

2013 cleaning my shelves challenge

3.5 stars

Originally published on my blog August 30, 2013. Please consider popping by ;)

This book is probably one of the creepiest things I've ever read. Like, I had the urge to buy holy-water and wear onion rings around my neck and stitch crosses into my clothing while reading it. It's also a book I'm pretty conflicted about, because I both passionately hated it but fiercely loved parts of it it at the same time. I guess I'm slightly like Violet, in that sense.

“Sunshine, if I ever disappear, please tell people that I ran after the Devil, trying to get my soul back.”

Violet White (perfect name #1), is a girl I'd love meeting and befriending. She's a bookworm, and a film lover, and has a totally awesome eccentric way about her. She was closest with her grandma Freddie, and still mourns her death, which means she wears her clothes and sometimes goes letter-haunting for her secrets.

She and her twin brother/womanizer, Luke, live practically alone in an old manor called Citizen Kane (like the movie) set on the background of a little town called Echo and the gushing sea, with only one neighbor called Sunshine Black (perfect name #2) for company... until River moves into the Guesthouse. River is a mysterious, lying stranger Violet can't seem to ignore. With him, weird things start happening. Little serious kids start talking of the Devil. children disappear. Ghosts appear. Chaos descends. Madness... 

River West (Perfect name #3) is the character that made this whole book so conflicting. I spent the first 1/3 of the book hating his guts and wondering what Violet saw in him because the dude was creepy and seemed to me bat-shit crazy. Then I spent the another 1/3 kind of liking him, and being intrigued by him, while simultaneously continuing to hate his guts and fantasizing about his death. I felt sorry for him, but in a true Violet fashion, I still didn't trust him. What he's doing then is still pretty evil, as Freddie would say. I don't like evil. 
Then the last 1/3 came, and I kind of really liked him! (shocked you there, didn't I?) 

So my feelings toward this book altered together with my feelings toward River, and as those were kind of all over the place and were a kind of a mix between hatred and love, same goes for the book. But I got invested in the book. Enough to care about what River was doing, enough to scream in my head; 'WHAT THE HELL IS GOING ON!?' and 'STAY AWAY FROM THAT BOY' and 'WHAT THE ARE YOU THINKING?!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' which basically meant my brain was on overdrive. 

I was also conflicted about the romance. at first I didn't like it (as I found the love interest disturbing) and it was pretty instant and more than once, I wanted to bang Violet's head against the wall for the things she was doing and her thoughts, which often contrasted. But then River told her - and us - what's his deal... and I realized there was more to it all, which made me really forget and forgive all the rest and made me super intrigued as to how it will continue.

Despite my love-hate relationship with book, it captures you from page one, with it's Gothic background, amazing sceneries, the lyrical sense to the words, and the captivating narrator. I want to live in this book so badly (minus the creeptastic things, of course). I loved little Jack, and I enjoyed the relationship between Luke and Vi, even if it was annoying at times. Neely is my favorite brother, so far (seems like there will be more than one or two...) and I wish Freddie was alive. 

There were only two minor things that bothered me a bit about the writing. First, some sentence sounded a little... off. Like, it wasn't humans speaking. And then there was that really big emphasize on sex. Don't get me wrong, sexytime with River and Violet was pretty steamy and fun, but all their talking about Luke and girls and second base and breasts and blah blah kind of got old after awhile...  
 
The last 100 pages of this book were pure perfection; they were so creepy, and scary, and heart-racing, and action packed, and nightmare inducing and I freakin' LOVED River in them! I simply couldn't glue myself from the book and my nails are really suffering from the abuse I inflicted on them in those 100 pages and dear god almighty April can come up with the craziest and creepiest and scariest characters ever
And it was definitely necessary to say all that without any breaks, because those 100 pages demand a gushing reaction that makes you unable to put dots between your words.

Originally published on my blog August 30, 2013. Please consider popping by ;)

Last modified on

Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 25 August, 2013: Finished reading
  • 25 August, 2013: Reviewed