School Library Journal Review
Gr 9 Up--When Magdalena is sent to her grandparents' Washington State summer home after a scandal at her private school, she has to simultaneously navigate her own recovery, new relationships, and, later on, an encounter with a serial killer. Now, white 18-year-old Magda is self-aware and can deftly sidestep social pitfalls…but she wasn't always that way. Through her recollections, readers learn she used to be a popular socialite with a remarkable talent for the written word. Then, her selfish plans backfired, one after the other. As readers meet the post-scandal Lena first, she remains a sympathetic character even after revealing her appalling actions. Both her regrets and her first-person narrative voice, which feels disillusioned by life and detached from others, reveal a character who genuinely wants to be better. By recognizing her classicist, racist, socially-driven attitudes, and by meeting the romantic interest, Bo, Lena starts to work through her trauma and dependency on prescription drugs. Her present-day narrative and past revelations dive deeper in tandem, thoroughly linking plot, emotional state, and thematic material. VERDICT A thoughtful, engaging YA thriller that touches upon mental health, social issues, and how words are used to manipulate reality.--Rachel Forbes, Oakville P.L., Ont.
Publisher's Weekly Review
Angelini's (Trial by Fire) sometimes-gruesome mystery turned thriller teems with heart-pounding action and suspense. Wealthy New Yorker Magdalena, 18, is visiting her Pacific Northwest grandparents for the summer following a murder investigation at her private high school that led to a nervous breakdown and a stint in a mental health facility. Still heavily medicated, Magda is eager for a fresh start after her devastating lies ostracized her from parents and friends, and she slowly reunites with old summer acquaintances, including charming and manipulative Rob. When she meets Bo, who is living illegally with his family in the National Forest behind her grandparents' house, she falls for him. But as remnants of bodies start appearing in the woods and rumors circulate about a rogue scientist feeding drugs into the community, Magda investigates, risking those she loves. Though uneven character development is capped off with a too-tidy ending, Angelini intersperses Magda's first-person voice with flashbacks of her past to create a riveting portrait of an unreliable and cunning narrator. Includes trigger warnings for mentions of abuse, racism, and self-harm. Ages 14--up. Agent: Annette Dal Jensen, Macmillan Children's Books UK. (Dec.)■
Booklist Review
Diagnosed with schizophrenia and surrounded by shallow and disloyal friends, Magdalena ends up the center of controversy at her New York private school after she is linked to the death of a young girl. After spending time in a mental health facility, she is sent to Washington to spend time with her grandparents amongst new surroundings. Unable to escape her traumatic past, Magdalena tries to find comfort and solace in new friends and in Bo, the boy she met in the woods. When a body is found mutilated near the river, Magdalena begins to question the people around her--Bo, her new friends, volunteers at the rehab facility where she now works--and even herself. The unreliable narration will keep readers wondering if Magdalena knows more than she's letting on. Angelini (Starcrossed, 2011) weaves an entertaining narrative that explores mental health, trust, betrayal, friendship, and the ways in which whiteness and privilege shape the narrative of substance abuse. A fascinating, mind-bending thrill ride.