Not meaning to start the review with a deeply intrusive and definitely impolite question, but doing so anyway:
Have you ever looked at yourself on the mirror and disliked what you saw? You probably didn't even look that bad, but because you felt like scrutinizing every single detail of your features and comparing it to everybody you know, suddenly you deem your eyes too far apart or too close together; your nose too small or too crooked; you cheekbones way too high and what the hell did you do to your hair to make it hate you so much?
What about school? How's that going for you? Are you forever stuck in mediocrity, poster boy/girl for averageness? Or maybe you have less friends than you could count in one hand - let alone real ones - and your social life is so dead it's starting to smell.
What if it could all end, though?
What if you could just swear an oath, recite some crap in gaelic - forget that it has a meaning that you have no idea of - and make all your insecurities, your uncertainties go away?
You could be beautiful. You could be popular. Hell, you could be fucking rich! Everything you could ever want, one barely pronounceable oath away. Would you do it?
Alexis would. Kasey, her sister, has returned from the mental institute she spent ten months in after the events on Bad Girls Don't Die, and now she's starting high school. Alexis knows it's going to be a massacre. Kasey wasn't that good with people and, for all everyone knew, after having just returned from a nuthouse she certainly wasn't any popular either. But suddenly, she is. Now Kasey has a posse, and she dresses in beautiful clothes, gets the best grades and sits on practically the best table. Alexis doesn't want to believe her sister has gotten herself mixed up with the paranormal again, but the signs are all there and so she joins Kasey's Sunshine Club to investigate what is going on, not knowing she could lose her life - and her soul - in the process.
This book, man. I really, really enjoyed it and it was probably the most fun i've had with a book this year, Paranormalcy aside. The writing was very fluid, the plot was amazing and the characters never disappointed me. Alexis is, in my opinion, a badass but not because she did anything insane like kicking down doors or shooting people in the face, but because she's smart and sarcastic and a total hypocrite, like most other characters in most other books. The difference is, she totally knows it.
Now, I might not have lived long, but I've lived enough to give you the following bit of wisdom: the world is separated between hypocrites that admit to being so, and hypocrites who claim to have no idea what that's all about.
It's not bitterness and it's not because I'm one of those people-hating hipsters who think life is a jungle and it's every man for himself; it's just a fact. You, me, the person you love the most, the person you wouldn't mind hearing died in a fire; we're all hypocrites because at one point or another - or at various points, most likely - we condemned someone for doing something we ourselves have done, thought we should have done or that someone else ought to have done even if we wouldn't.
It's life. And it kinda pisses me off that most characters in books are always the kind of hypocrites who pretend not to be. It gets old really fast and so it was a breath of fresh air that in this series, Alexis has always been like this, a person who knows that she's constantly annoyed at other people for doing things she herself has done. I loved this book for tons of other reasons but mainly because of how likable and relatable Alexis is.
Also, because I don't know what I would have done in her place. If I could stop having to worry about my appearance, my grades, my social life and basically every other issue that worries me - and all I had to do in return was let some entity occasionally tell me what to do and what to say, I like to think I would still say no, but since it won't ever happen, I have no idea.
Still, it's food for thought, right?