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294 pages, Hardcover
First published April 19, 2022
[IMMERSIVE- 16 points]
“But life, like Scrabble, is like that—you get the rack you get, and you just have to figure out how to make do.”
“Every player knows that words can be twisted to suit your purpose, if the board allows it, and Trina knows this better than most. She is fantastic; she ignites fantasies. She is spectacular; she attracts spectacle.”
“That’s just how she was; she saw something she wanted and she went for it with a laser-sharp intensity that could border on the obsessive. All or nothing, perfection or perish.”
I stay there for a while, leaning against the padded hotel wall, trying to figure out what it is about death that makes people think we need to paint over all the cracks. “Don’t speak ill of the dead,” they say, as if the dead care.

Quick sidenote about the Muslim rep:
There were some subtle references to Islam, what with Najwa and her mom wearing hijab, and also a mention of prayer. It felt really normal though in that it didn’t become preachy or go on a tangent to explain Islam/why people wear hijab etc. It was just a part of life that nobody blinked twice at, and I love that it was so normal and not the overwhelming focus of the book.
Reigning Scrabble queen, the glamourous, mysterious, and quick-witted Trina Low was playing a game when she slumped on the board and died. Her death was not considered murder, and a year has since passed since the incident. On the very first night of the same tournament where she died, her Instagram comes back to life with mysterious posts suggesting her death may not have been as blameless as it seemed.
Surrounded by the same kids who were there when Trina died, Najwa must now find out who could be responsible. Trina had a lot of rivals, but was someone bitter enough to commit murder? Was Trina really as perfect as Najwa remembers her to be? And what is it that happened on that fateful weekend that Najwa just can’t remember?
So much is revealed and nothing is quite as it seems in this modern take on the classic whodunit.