Southern Lady Reads (Crazy Busy-Will Catch Up!)'s Reviews > After That Night
After That Night (Will Trent, #11)
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Southern Lady Reads (Crazy Busy-Will Catch Up!)'s review
bookshelves: 2023, 2023-netgalley-reads, trigger-warnings, publisher-williammorrow
Aug 16, 2023
bookshelves: 2023, 2023-netgalley-reads, trigger-warnings, publisher-williammorrow
After reading Karin Slaughter's 'Girl, Forgotten' - I was really hoping this one would be better in terms of the mystery - AND IT WAS!!! So many moving pieces and parts of this story in the seedy world of the quietly rich. I had fun figuring out who the real villain(s) were.
THOUGHTS:
- Karin Slaughter has a talent for writing books that point in the direction of the person(s) committing the crime, but as in real life - these people are hard to catch. You need evidence. No going in guns half-cocked. These cases are so horrendous that people committing the crimes must be locked away tightly. You read every line because you, the reader, become invested in finding those small clues that will lock them away forever. (Because, as we all know - that's how people get caught.. they get lazy and leave something small unattended!)
- Something else Slaughter does well is the creation of the quietly insane unlikeable female. She's unlikeable. She's usually not integral to figuring out the crime until seen in a certain light - and I think that's a hard character to right. They're sociopaths hidden in plain sight. Men are often the ones we look at as committing horrible crimes - but women? We typically tend to put them in the victim box, so when they're the perpetrators, puppeteers, or masterminds behind violent crimes? Shocking.
NOTES:
- CWs: Graphic descriptions of the aftermath of s3xual assault
**Thank you to William Morrow & NetGalley for the advanced reader copy. I received this book for free, but all thoughts are my own. – SLR 🖤
Find Me On Instagram 🦋 || More Bookish Thoughts & Reviews Here 🖤
THOUGHTS:
- Karin Slaughter has a talent for writing books that point in the direction of the person(s) committing the crime, but as in real life - these people are hard to catch. You need evidence. No going in guns half-cocked. These cases are so horrendous that people committing the crimes must be locked away tightly. You read every line because you, the reader, become invested in finding those small clues that will lock them away forever. (Because, as we all know - that's how people get caught.. they get lazy and leave something small unattended!)
- Something else Slaughter does well is the creation of the quietly insane unlikeable female. She's unlikeable. She's usually not integral to figuring out the crime until seen in a certain light - and I think that's a hard character to right. They're sociopaths hidden in plain sight. Men are often the ones we look at as committing horrible crimes - but women? We typically tend to put them in the victim box, so when they're the perpetrators, puppeteers, or masterminds behind violent crimes? Shocking.
NOTES:
- CWs: Graphic descriptions of the aftermath of s3xual assault
**Thank you to William Morrow & NetGalley for the advanced reader copy. I received this book for free, but all thoughts are my own. – SLR 🖤
Find Me On Instagram 🦋 || More Bookish Thoughts & Reviews Here 🖤
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Reading Progress
August 10, 2023
–
Started Reading
August 10, 2023
– Shelved
August 10, 2023
– Shelved as:
2023-netgalley-reads
August 10, 2023
– Shelved as:
2023
August 10, 2023
– Shelved as:
trigger-warnings
August 16, 2023
–
Finished Reading
August 30, 2023
– Shelved as:
publisher-williammorrow
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Jayme
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Aug 16, 2023 11:36AM
Terrific review! 💞
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