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Expected Publication: July 24, 2018
Pages: 336 |
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Girls' Night Out is touted as a "chilling novel of psychological suspense". In this book three women who have been friends for decades embark on a vacation to Tulum, Mexico. Recently the three friends have been estranged, and this vacation was to help rekindle their friendship. On the vacation one of the friends goes missing. As the book unravels it delves into their friendships, their marriages and the choices they have made. The novel shifts from the days before the disappearance, the night of the disappearance and the days after the disappearance. I personally liked this element because it was like the putting together of a puzzle.
I really liked the premise of this novel and thought it had a lot of potential. A beach read with drama, secrets and suspense, sign me up! However, this book fell incredibly short of my expectations. First, I felt the book lacked complexity. There were many different avenues that could have been explored, but in my opinion were very surface level. For example (see Goodreads for spoiler). The characterization was also extremely shallow and the main characters failed to be distinctive. The characterization ultimately made it impossible to relate to the characters and understand their motivations and actions. For instance, why the heck these three women would go to Tulum together at all after being estranged for essentially a year. I mean, at this point they may have wanted to start with coffee somewhere closer to home.
Secondly, the writing (especially the metaphors) were banal. For example, describing Ashley's daughters ages as "such cute ages!" or describing Marco as having a "nice biceps muscle" and a "six pack" and wanting to go to be beach to see his body. The lack of originality in the writing unfortunately lost my interest quite early on. Honestly it's not because I don't enjoy this type of book. I can love what are supposedly "guilty pleasures" or books full of gossip and real housewife drama. In fact, I just read and loved "Crazy Rich Asians" which was absolutely vicious in both gossip and drama, but also extremely readable.
Finally, the "mystery" was lost to my first two points. It just wasn't enough to carry the book. I was hard-core skimming through the last half of Girls' Night Out.
I know I am in the minority here, but I didn't like this book; and there were no redeeming qualities to make me change my mind. Honestly it probably would have been a DNF had it not been an ARC.
#GirlsNightOut #Netgalley
Thanks to Netgalley and Lake Union Publishing for an ARC of Girls' Night Out.