I've decided to go back into reading and this was the first book I chose to start with. As a comment mentioned, they chose the book because the cover and title attracted them, as it did to me (props to Jaye Zimet- jacket designer). This book has been an amazing and enjoyable read; the story had me wanting to go back and keep reading.
Matt, the inconspicuous guy that fell for the lusty gothic girl, Skye. I was a high school student last year, so I could still vividly connect myself with the setting and the characters. At first, it seemed a normal teenage romance but then the true colors of Skye: a manipulative, crazy and mentally unstable girl. She went as far as to blackmail Matt with her sister's picture. That was so low, so sinister and sadistic. I have a sister, so I could understand the massive rage he felt at that moment.
The evolution of Matt was interesting to see. It was shown at the beginning of the book that he was a shy, inclusive person, but being involved with Skye has given him a spark. The Goth Girl gave him a taste of excitement- sexual, illegal and romantic excitement. She made him feel sentiments he never had experienced. After Skye's lying mask had been uncovered, he acted in ways he couldn't have done in the beginning of the book- a "New Matt"
He began to talk back, as seen with the hospital's receptionist. He began to stand his ground, as seen with his friend Jeremy. He had become a raged-driven teen who decided that he wasn't going to live a life as an observer anymore.
The ending was interesting. I really thought Matt would confront Skye and kill her by strangling her or the like. It would be easy since Skye was drunk and she would'nt be fast enough to grab her gun, but maybe that is too much for a teen novel or isn't so Matt-like. In a way, he did kill her by choosing her to die. After that night, Matt would continue his life as New Matt, thanks to Skye. Most likely, he will create new friends, be more out there and become active instead of reactive, as Taylor said. Skye took Matt to the traffic, and he was ran over so much, but he learned to drive. And will continue to drive without Skye.
The book was great, but not perfect. The author repeats words more than three times- swigged, hauling, wadded, to name and few. And there's even some errors in the book. At some point, Ken was confused with Jeremy, and I had to read the entire page many times to see if I missed something and understand it. Skye's past was left hanging- why did she lied so much? Was his father really molesting her? Why did she became the way she is? What really happened in her house? There are so many questions. Sure, she didn't want the baby to be born, making her lose the "little space" she has in her family, but there's gotta be more than that. You can't throw many things and then not explain them. The author didn't ventured down into her past as much. And it's something important.
All in all, very good book. Enjoyable reading. Would recommend.