17 Mar 2023
1. So when I started re-reading this one after realizing I had no brainspace to finish a whole new book, I did skim through my old review. I was fully expecting general creepiness, but I did think my younger self (it has been 6 years) was maybe overreacting a bit. BOY WAS I WRONG.
2. The antagonist and her posse are deeply, deeply terrifying and infuriating. I have a strong urge to reach into the book and commit murder. Aunt Maria is evil in small, petty ways (to start with) and it's not until all the ways pile up one after the other that you realize how godawful she is. It's like this nagging mosquito that seems fairly harmless at first, but which then starts to buzz louder and louder and louder till you go crazy and then you find out it's not just carrying fatal pathogens but also indestructible. The buildup from petty annoyance to this-crosses-the-line concerning behavior to actual horror is very slow and gradual, and you can see it happening before your eyes like an avalanche that cannot be stopped.
3. Also, you can see how old this book is from all the little details (like the existence of telephone operators) and also the blatant enforcing of gender roles is so much more direct than what I'm used to from today's book. I mean, it's obviously deliberate, because Aunt Maria is a sexist, sexist little bitch (is she a misogynist? maybe not, because it's at least partially a facade used to control others) and the roles she keeps thrusting on to Mig and her mom in particular are particularly stifling. Like Aunt Maria getting all pearl-clutchy because they wore pants.
Bless Chris for his "should I wear a skirt too?" when Aunt Maria passive-aggressively hinted that the girls had to change to skirts to be presentable for company. I love you Chris. Sure you are yelling into a lion's mouth but who can blame you. If I were there with you, I too would have made bad life choices and gotten transmogrified for them.
4. Chris is the MVP. Okay listen, I know he didn't actually make the situation any better and probably made it worse with all his snide commentary but HOO BOY did I need someone able and willing to snark openly at Aunt Maria. It was like my screaming feelings of rage and resentment had an outlet. Thank you, Chris! Mig and her mom are more constrained by social norms and expectations than Chris is, and that means they have to compromise more. Here's gender coming into things again.
5. I have to say I was actually more interested in the psychological warfare stuff than in the magic stuff? Honestly, I'd have liked it fine if this was a non-supernatural book with just the passive aggressiveness and social bullying. Not that the supernatural element was bad, per se (especially the insidious memory modification bits). I got more into it as the story went on, but I think the emotions and feelings I got from he starting bits were stronger overall. That said, that could just be because of me rushing to finish this one on time so eh. //shruggif
6. One last thing before I wrap up. DWJ is a very good writer. As in, she is one of those writers whose prose does not give me "I'm reading this as fast as I can and I mostly want to get to the next bit of dialogue" feelings. The insights in her narration are often very poignant, and there are a lot of feelings and observations in here that made me go "oh". I think the first person PoV helped with that, but probably not by that much.
19 Feb 2017
4.5 Stars
Yeah so this book is way creepier than the cover or the blurb would suggest.
Aunt Maria is not sweet and not nice and everyone knows it. She's a study in the usage of PASSIVE-AGGRESSIVENESS (the way she uses it, it deserves the shouty letters), who guilts the rest of the people who are civilized, into doing what she tells them to do because she is old and apparently, helpless. She has a group of women attending to all of her needs, acting as her lieutenants, and together they rule the town with smiles and snide comments.
Everyone who's been stared and shook-headed into wearing more decent or more ladylike clothing, you know what I'm talking about. And yes, it's EXACTLY as frustrating as you imagine. A few chapters into the book, you are ready to start yelling at people to break something. Sadly Chris (the narrator Mig's brother) is the only one who does this, and he gets turned into a wolf for his troubles.
Maria is ruthless- she orders executions and destruction of lives with a gleeful pettiness that's so human that it's worrying. Most of the story deals with Migs' attempt to figure out what on earth is going on with the town, while Maria spies on her through her well... coven, I suppose.
I'm suspecting there are cultural references in this book that I just don't get (the same way there were for Dogsbody), which make some moments more "huh?" than "aha". I liked the feeling of constant god-i-gotta-watch-over-my-shoulder that the book gave me, and the mind control stuff was frankly terrifying.