My second title of Marissa Finch, and I'm so glad I read this one second.
My first encounter with this author left me feeling a bit jaded. But, who am I to tell an author how they ought to have wrapped up their story, made more likeable characters, evaded large plot holes, not have everything come out of left field?
Alice isn't anywhere near one of my favorite fictional characters but finding out about the events in her life, such as the incident and her father, she's an understandable one. Then comes Taylor, this Serena van der Woodsen-esque girl who takes a liking to Alice, helps her gain some confidence, and get her life going... on the run. It's obvious there's going to be a betrayal but the reasons were not (initially) obvious at all. The relationship between Alice, her mother, her best friend and neighbor (and her brother), and Taylor all seem very realistic. There's more depth to these characters, as a whole, but there are still a few issues I'd take up about Enid (and maybe the mother).
There are excerpts of the past sprinkled throughout the book which became increasingly interesting and important to unraveling the mystery. Even if you do figure that out, there was another twist that completely shocked me. The revelation of this second shock was surprising because of how frightening the thought of such atrocities being committed by someone who says they love you is. Adding the pieces together makes sense, the manipulation makes sense, the past incident makes sense, but parts of the plan to take on Alice seemed unusually cruel for this person to be involved in/supportive of.
The cat and mouse game was enthralling and I had the same thought as Alice towards the latter end of her evasively running around. While the first few chapters weren't particularly intriguing something about them captured my attention which made this a one day read.