Die 16-jährigen Zwillingsschwestern Ivy und Iris leben seit der Trennung ihrer Eltern vor 6 Jahren getrennt, eine bei jedem Elternteil. Doch dann verunglückt ihre Mutter tödlich und Iris zieht wieder bei Ivy und ihrem Dad ein. Die beiden Schwestern gleichen sich äußerlich bis aufs Haar, doch sind so verschieden wie zwei Menschen nur sein können. Die vernunftgesteuerte Ivy versucht der emotionalen Iris zu helfen, ist bereit, mit ihr alles zu teilen, schließlich sind sie Schwestern. Zwillinge. Iris nimmt das Angebot an. Mehr als nur gerne ... Und innerhalb kürzester Zeit sind alle Iris‘ Charme erlegen. Ivys Freunde, ihre Teamkollegen, ihr Freund, sogar ihr Vater. Und Ivy beginnt sich zu fragen, wie weit Iris gehen würde, um ihren Platz endgültig einzunehmen …
#1 New York Times Bestselling Author of The Cellar and The Cabin. Romance and YA Thriller writer, boy mum, Tom Hardy enthusiast. Always buried in a book and a glass of wine.
Look at this dark, haunted and sooo beautiful cover! It whispers to your ear slowly: “Pleaseeee read me!” And I did what I was told.
Good twin and evil twin, dark one wants to take place of the white one. This kind of mind bending, nail biting, nightmare summoning, evil soul conjuring stories are my all-time favorites and they never make me disappointed as like this book which gave me enough entertainment and irritating satisfaction.
You know classic “Single White Female” theme. They’re not twins but evil roommate Jennifer Jason Leigh became jealous of Bridget Fonda and she was so adamant to live her life by taking her place with planning deadly scheme. She starts to dress like her, having a haircut like her, stealing the boyfriend of her by acting like her. This sick, mindf**king story reminded me of the deadly dance of this book’s twins: let’s take a look at our lovely twins Iris and Ivy. Don’t worry, their story is not less agitated than the classic replacing the lucky twin by threatening her life story.
Iris lives with his mother. Ivy lives with his father. Both twins are separated when they were only 10 and they have no special bond. The story started like “Parent Trap” movie, right? And you think that those sisters try to match make their parents to be a happy and big family again. NO! NO! NO! At the end of Parent Trap Dennis Quaid married with his childish wife who is younger than his son. (Sorry that was real life! It wasn’t written on the script. And Lindsay Lohan ate her imaginary twin to become a mean girl, end of the real story!) This time mother goes for a jog and falls down from a bridge! So mother is out of picture and Iris comes to live with her father and twin sister. But guess what, she whispers mean things to her sister when she is out of earshot of their father.
Iris starts to go to same school with her sister and compete with her at the swimming team. And poor Ivy feels threatened after finding not so cute Mickey Mouse kind of dead rat at her locker, having troubles with her besties and boyfriend. Her life starts getting out of control. And as you may imagine, their mother’s dying is not an accident. The evil twin might have killed her. So what’s gonna happen? Which one will defeat the other? Which one is going to be survivor? Is Ivy paranoid and did she imagine the entire fall-out of hers? Do you want to find out? Come on, grab the book, flip the pages and take a long sip from your refreshment. You’re gonna need all liquid courage to relax your nervous mind!
OVERALL: The story was not something so unique or original but it was still mysterious, well-written, heart throbbing. Pace was a little slow but it still gives the eerie and ominous feelings you need to get from terrifying thrillers. 3.75 rounded to 4 stars. It’s quite interesting and captivating YA thriller. I recommend it to the genre’s die-hard fans! I had mostly great time during my reading.
Special thanks to NetGalley and Random House Children’s/Delacorte Press and of course brilliant author Natasha Preston for providing me this nail biter, exciting book’s ARC COPY in exchange for my honest review.
En La gemela nos encontramos con una historia menos habitual a lo que la autora, Natasha Preston, nos tenía acostumbradxs. En este libro no tenemos 'misterio' como tal, no hay un secuestro o asesinos en serie. Este libro va un poco más allá. El enemigo puede estar entre nosotros, pero solo tú puedes verlo.
La historia se centra en Ivy, que vive con su padre desde que su madre y él se divorciaron. Pero tiene una gemela, Iris, que decidió quedarse con su madre. Tras el suicidio de esta, Iris tiene que volver irremediablemente con su padre... y compartir vida con Ivy. ¿Qué puede salir mal?
Una de las cosas que más me ha gustado de la novela (y ojo, quiero destacarlo porque en un primer momento fue la causante de que no me enganchara tan rápido) es lo lenta que se cuece. Es quizá hasta la mitad que no comenzamos a ver las cosas claras, o salirse demasiado de madre. Los asuntos avanzan lentos, las tramas no parecen tener significado... Pero todo está en los detalles, hasta la más mínima conversación sirve al final para comprender la magnitud del asunto. Sin duda alguna, en ese sentido creo que Natasha Preston ha mejorado mucho en construcción de trama y personajes.
El ritmo es, como comento, algo lento, pero no evita que sea interesante. Es una lucha difícil: ¿cómo puedo decir que es lento pero importante? Sirve perfectamente para su cometido: conocer cómo funciona la mente de Ivy, su estilo de narrar y su voz, y ver también cómo el entorno va mutando desde lo que se nos presenta en los primeros capítulos.
Esta novela es un thriller psicológico de manual, y Natasha Preston consigue plasmarlo a la perfección. El uso que le da a la narración trasciende la propia historia. La protagonista poco a poco se va volviendo obsesiva y eso traspasa las páginas. Al principio cuenta las cosas de manera sencilla, poco enrevesada, pero según su vida se va desestabilizando podemos tener capítulos enteros sin ningún tipo de diálogos y dándole la vuelta a las mismas ideas, mismas frases, mismos conceptos. Una y otra vez, rumiando, repitiendo. La lectura se hace más lenta, parece tosca, vemos cómo la protagonista se centra en detalles y les da vueltas haciendo que tú como lector percibas lo extenuante que es. Sin duda, me ha sorprendido.
Por otro lado, tenemos a los personajes. En todos los libros de la autora tenemos una protagonista principal y un montón de gente a su alrededor, y sin embargo en esta novela he sentido que pese a tener varios secundarios, la historia se centraba mucho más en Ivy. Eso también me parece un avance porque no deja de demostrar de una forma indirecta la tensión psicológica a la que se somete por la llegada de su hermana a su zona de comfort.
Y sí: engancha. Tiene giros inesperados, y otros no tanto, pero en conjunto creo que la autora te lleva de la mano a donde quiere. La vida de Ivy se desmorona y tú la acompañas viendo cómo no puedes hacer nada, impotente. Eso, en parte, engancha. Pero sin duda lo que te genera el ansia de pasar las páginas son las dinámicas con el resto de personajes y en especial con Iris, Tyler y el padre. En mi caso, al menos, ha sido así. Probablemente cada lector encuentre diferentes relaciones con las que sentirse más o menos identificado.
Para mí La gemela se convierte en una de mis novelas favoritas de Preston. Igual es pronto para decir que en mi favorita porque es de estos libros que probablemente vuelvan a mi mente durante semanas, y entonces decidiré que es mi favorito de la autora. Sin embargo, y de momento, prefiero ser más crítico y comentar todo lo que me ha gustado, lo que no tanto y analizarla de manera más fría, porque como todos sus libros, tiene sus fallitos que no lo hacen perfecto.
En definitiva: este libro es una bomba. Puede no parecerlo cuando lo empiezas, pero te va a sumergir y a asfixiar en su atmósfera.La gemela es una gran muestra de la mejora de la autora y estoy deseando descubrir si tendremos o no una segunda parte.
I'm so mad at the author. Why was there no justice for Ivy? It was like the author had turned against her own main character. What was the actual point in reading this book, allowing the events to unfold when nothing was resolved or concluded well. Nothing. This book was a waste of time.
I recieved this early as part of a book tour, all my opinions arw my own and given voluntarily. This review contains spoilers!
I really disliked this book. It started off alright but it was all right in there... There was no build up and as much as I felt tension and the need to finish it I didn't really believe it... Absolutely no one believes her? They've known her for a long time and suddenly they don't believe her... This makes no sense to me at all...
The ending! This ending killed me! I have zero answers to many many questions! It seems to have a totally open ending! I don't want to give major spoilers but... Seriously! I'm so frickin annoyed at this book! So upset with how it played out.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Special thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing me with an e-ARC in exchange for an honest review
DNF @ 30% but skimmed to about 51%.
You know those posts where someone says, "I made a bot watch 1,000 hours of _______ and this is what it came up with."
Well, I think a bot watched 1,000 hours of Lifetime movies and spat this out.
Nothing feels natural. Our narrator, Ivy the good twin, is not written very well. Her narration of the story is honestly so uncomfortably bad that I was cringing while reading it.
Every chapter ends the same:
*Iris (the bad twin) does something suspicious that ONLY Ivy sees as suspicious* Ivy: ...Why? (I am not exaggerating, "Why?" is literally the last line of many of the chapters)
Or something like:
"Why does she need to talk to my friends?"
It's just way too heavy on the whole twin-sister-is-trying-to-takeover-my-life thing. Iris (bad twin) is NOT subtle. The friends INSTANTLY turn on good-twin, I'm talking first conversation with evil sister type shit. Of course evil-twin eventually comes for the boyfriend and OF COURSE he turns on good-twin too over something really fucking dumb.
We are told so many times by 10% that Ivy (good twin) is a "problem-solver" and "tries to fix everything" and she "doesn't understand Iris's behavior" and it got so annoying that I honestly wanted Iris to just take her out of the story early on so I wouldn't have to deal with her anymore.
I like the concept of the evil twin and had high hopes for this book, but it just wasn't grabbing my attention and felt like a never ending string of bland high school drama. I held out hope that the ending would be worth it and at least leave me satisfied, but I could not have been more wrong. The ending irritated me even more than the rest of the book. Anyways, this book was not for me. Nevertheless, if it sounds interesting give it a try, or another book I would recommend by this author is The Cellar.
The Twin by Natasha Preston is a young adult thriller that reminded me a lot of the old movie Single White Female but with teen twins. Iris and Ivy are the twins in this story with Ivy being the protagonist of the book.
When Iris and Ivy were young their parents filed for divorce and at that time Ivy stayed with her father while Iris moved with her mother. Now though after an accident takes the girls mother’s life Ivy finds herself forced to make room for Iris back in her life. It doesn’t take long though for Ivy to see that Iris is pushing her way into all aspects of Ivy’s life as Ivy begins to question her sister’s motives.
Now, as I said this one reminded me strongly of a movie so I wouldn’t say the book is overly original as it stands however I still found the story entertaining to read. What we have is the age old battle of good vs evil with the girls with of course no one else seeing just what our “bad” twin is up to leaving the protagonist fighting the evil on her own. Definitely enjoyable enough to spend a few hours reading even if it didn’t really surprise me much.
I received an advance copy from the publisher via NetGalley.
Ivy and Iris are twins. They are separated when their parents divorce. Ivy stays with their dad, Iris goes with their mother. When their mom is killed in what seems to be a freak accident, Iris comes to live with Ivy and their dad.
Iris slowly seems to take over Iris's life. She makes it seem as if Ivy is mentally unstable and jealous. As she starts creating drifts between Ivy and her friends, she also causes a rift between Ivy and their father. Looking into Iris, her old friends, and certain situations, Ivy comes to believe that there is something seriously wrong with Iris. She may even be a cold blooded killer.
I loved this book! While I always felt that Ivy was the sane one of the two, I sometimes doubted her myself. The story line was great. I would label it as a psychological thriller. I couldn't put the book down, it was a page turner. The only thing that I didn't like was the ending. I don't want to give it away for someone who hasn't read it, but this book is crazy good. Emphasis on crazy!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
When their parents divorced, identical twins Ivy and Iris are split apart. Iris chooses to live with their mother, while Ivy stays with their father. But when their mother dies, the twins’ worlds are turned upside down as they’re forced to live under the same roof, and try to come to terms with their mother’s death.
The story is told from Ivy’s point of view, and after only a few pages, I’ve already come to the conclusion that I don’t much care for her. She’s a bit self-centered, somewhat neurotic, and very high-strung. The first thing she does when she and Iris get home is take off to be with her boyfriend, completely leaving Iris alone in a place she’s not really comfortable with, without any kind of warning. Then once she’s back home, even though Iris makes it clear she doesn’t want to, Ivy tries to talk about their mother, and gets annoyed when Iris asks her to stop.
Ivy has this compulsive habit of biting her lip, and she does it so much I’m surprised she hasn’t chewed it off yet. Her mind never shuts off, jumping from one thing to another to another at lightning speed, to the point that just reading about all the things she thinks about at once mentally exhausted me. On top of that, she comes off as more than a little paranoid, always questioning everything, whether she has a reason to or not.
We also get the cliché “everyone in school is staring at us.” I come from a small town, and even when a new student came in, no one ever stared and talked about them like they were from another planet rather than another school. People don’t do this.
Once Iris starts going out on her own, Ivy begins to get paranoid about where she’s going, and who she’s meeting with. It comes off as if she’s entitled to know everything about what Iris is doing at all times.
The author might have intended for this to be a mystery/thriller, but all I can read it as is a teenaged girl getting more and more paranoid, who starts to think that an ever-increasing number of people are plotting behind her back and are out to get her.
What a great suspenseful story. I always thought twins were so close, but these two twins consist of a very evil twin. As the twin's parents get a divorce Iris decides to live with her mother while Ivy moves away to live with her father. Their mother dies in a accident so Iris comes to live with her father and Ivy. Ivy was hoping they would become closer as sisters and twins and support each other after the loss of their mother. Isis is so mean and evil and puts on such a great performance. She does what she can to make Ivy looks mean, crazy and disrespectful. Iris tells lies to Ivy's friends, boyfriend, teachers, principle and their father to make Ivy look like she is losing it. What a great read. You won't want to stop reading until you get to the end and then you want to keep reading more. A must read.
So, this book had so much potential. It had the good twin bad twin thing that could have been written in such an interesting way, where the twins were both morally grey and could have avoided typical sibling tropes. But no it instead went for the basic good v bad twin. Now the middle of this book wasn't bad, in fact, I had a lot of hope for this book. BUT THEN THE ENDING. That ending ruined the book for me, it could have been so good. If this book turns out to be the first in a duology or something then maybe the ending can be redeemed, but as of right now, the ending ruined the entire book for me. It was rushed, seemed incomplete, and ugh just made me so mad. Overall, I'm giving this book 2 stars. I don't know if I'll read more from this author or not, but yeah this wasn't a great experience.
Me encantaría que mi opinión fuera otra porque realmente tenía ganas de que me gustara este libro, pero me ha parecido tedioso y evidente. Constantemente gira en torno a lo mismo, y el final es súper obvio. No lo recomiendo, hay muchos libros de suspense psicológico mil veces mejores que este (bajo mi humilde opinión)
romance: 4/10 (kissing. Cuddling in bed. Mentions of sex, birth control, and other forms of contraception. Mentions of cheating. Mentions of serial dating)
cursing: 3/10 (hell, damn, bitch, ass, slut)
violence: 2/10 (two people are pushed from high places and they die)
other: Mentions of underage drinking/drunkenness. Smoking. Mentions of premarital sexual activity
tw: death of a loved one, grief
first person, present tense
–OVERVIEW–
this book was a LOT different from Natasha’s other books. It focused more around the psychological kind of side. I feel like this book didn’t rlly get my heart to race as much as her other books usually do, maybe bc it’s not gory, maybe bc the stakes lie more in Iris stealing Ivy’s life 🤷♀️ it was definitely interesting and kept me invested tho which is what I look for in a book.
as you guys have likely noticed by now I’m doing a Natasha binge this month, I plan on reading all of her books so I’ll update you all on which one prevails as my all time favorite sometime soon 👹 Don’t ask why, but murder is a thought thats been in my brain a lot recently 🦅💅
anyhoo, this book was moderately good. I don’t think I’ll ever find a Natasha book that I despise, simply bc they’re never boring, not bc I love the characters or anything. As per usual I hated the FMC in this book, she was annoying and a bit of a pick me but okayyyy
my brain is still trying to process the abrupt way this ended 🫠🐿️
–PLOT–
Identical twin steals her sister’s life bc she’s a jealous psychopath
–CHARACTERS–
Ivy ⤷ annoying bish as usual
Iris ⤷ also an annoying bish bc like what 😭 i swear Natasha can’t write a good FMC
Disclaimer: My review for this book is based on an ARC sent to my workplace by Delacorte Press; all the following opinions I express are wholly my own.
The Twin by Natasha Preston is a lot like a Sara Shepard book; it has an interesting premise, but there's not a lot of meat to its bones.
I think it'll be perfect for the 12-16 year old age group; it seems scandalous, but in reality most of the material is very tame (and majorly unrealistic). It's not really a true thriller- it's a cotton candy version of one, meant to have you salivating at the end for the sequel, .
I found the plot little more than basic, the writing juvenile. When Ivy's parents divorced, her mother took her twin Iris, and Ivy herself stayed with her dad (don't even get me started on what kind of Parent Trap style f*ckery that is, not to mention the complete lack of logic there). A couple years later, Mom dies, and Iris comes to live with her sister and father. Iris proceeds to straight up start single-white-femaling Ivy; taking over her school group (complete with depthless friends and a stereotypically bitchy head cheerleader), her (painfully basic) boyfriend, her hobbies, even her clothes.
Speaking of, Ivy's description of her sister is very "i'M nOT LikE oTHer GirLs!!", which was annoying, but at the same time, I kind of had to root for Ivy, because you pretty much NEED to root for the protagonist who may or may not be getting gaslit by her maybe-evil twin.
Most of the book was a run-of-the-mill read for me, something I certainly would've enjoyed as a preteen, but ultimately would not have stuck with me afterwards. The last quarter picked up and started becoming more enjoyable to read (it's probably screwed up that the MC was much more relatable to me, and that the book was more fun in general, when she was losing her shit completely), but then the last chapter had to go and both lose me AND annoy me at the same time.
Me gusta el estilo de escritura que tiene Natasha Preston, fresco, ágil y además la manera en cómo presenta a los personajes y sus historias.
En esta, seguimos los pasos de Ivy, ella y su padre vivían solos después del divorcio, pero tras la muerte de la madre, su hermana gemela Iris volverá a vivir con ellos. Al inicio parece normal que su gemela no quiera abrirse y hablar de sus sentimientos tras la pérdida, pero todo se vuelve turbio cuando la vida de Ivy se va derrumbando poco a poco: le van dando la espalda quienes decían ser sus mejores amigas, sus profesores, su novio y hasta su padre. ¿Será que es demasiada coincidencia que justo cuando Iris regresa a sus vidas, la de Iris se desmorona? ¿Estará robándole su vida?
Al inicio se me hizo un poco lento, creo que fueron unas 150 páginas de introducción, eso se me hizo raro ya que en cada libro que voy leyendo de la autora me trae la acción desde un principio, pero en este no fue así. A partir de esa página tomamos un rumbo distinto, y es que sí vemos lo turbia que se está poniendo la historia, empecé a hacer teorías mientras más nos acercábamos al final. Tenía bastante claro cuál era la verdad detrás del misterio, sabía lo que estaba sucediendo, y aún así esperaba que me sorprendiera.
Faltaban alrededor de 20 páginas y yo aún esperaba el BOOM final, pero nunca llegó. A ver, sí, me emociono cuando logro descifrar un caso que incluye más de una muerte, sin embargo esperaba que me volara la cabeza, deseaba tanto que mi teoría no se cumpliera porque era bastante básica, quería más drama, más acción, plot twists y un final vengativo. Solo obtuve un final abierto...
Aún así, no me quejo. Es un libro para pasar el rato. Sabía que no se convertiría en mi próximo favorito. Es un libro incluso para devorarlo entre 24 o 48 horas. He quedado un poco decepcionada, sí, pero tampoco es que haya llegado a ser una pésima lectura, en definitiva no es el mejor de la autora.
What a complete and utter, BULLSHIT ending. This novel was already painful enough to read as it was. One star due to the fact it was short. However, it took me weeks to read because it was so flipping boring. I trudged on, praying to the book Gods that the ending would be my salvation. Nope, the ending was my undoing. Seriously the worst book I’ve read this year. Tried reading a novel previously by this author, but gave up 50 pages in. YA novels can be fun to read if done right and I like giving second chances. This lady gets it all wrong. Never picking up a book from this woman again.
Ha sido espeluznante, hay tensión en todo el libro. Lo he devorado.
No me esperaba que me fuera a gustar tanto, sin duda lo recomiendo. Es uno de los mejores thriller psicológicos que he leído.
Un trágico accidente acaba con la vida de la madre de Ivy e Iris, sus padres llevaban años separados e Iris vivía con su madre, por lo que ahora va a vivir con su padre y su gemela.
Pero Ivy empieza a ver cosas raras en su hermana, no quiere hablar de la muerte de su madre, parece que haya abandonado su vida anterior, quizás sólo es que Ivy la recuerda diferente.
Whoa what. This book had me on my toes. It's so many twists and turns. Okay so this book is about two twin sisters whose mom passed away. And so the other twin goes to live with her dad. And she starts taking over the other twin life. It's crazy Im telling you. It's a very good read.
Reconozco que nunca he leído nada de Natasha Preston y sentía mucha curiosidad, además con semejante sinopsis me moría por leerlo y ya para rematar contaba con opiniones buenísimas. Sin embargo, me he llevado una decepción tremenda y ha pasado a ser el peor libro que he leído este año, ahora entraré un poco más en detalle para daros mi opinión pero tranquilos que no soltaré ningún spoiler aunque me muera de ganas 😂
La trama es súper sencilla y aunque promete un thriller psicológico tremendo con muchos giros argumentales se queda en nada y todo resulta muy muy previsible. Solo nos cuenta la historia de Ivy y como todo se va truncando, no hay nada más, no esperéis grandes sorpresas, ni siquiera una trama que se centre algo más en la amistad o en la familia, no tiene apenas nada de romance, ni algunas subtramas interesantes o diferentes, si buscáis un misterio intenso o algo de lo anterior ya os digo que aquí no lo vais a encontrar, podéis encontrar mamarracheo, piques entre hermanas, personajes muy tocados y una trama de película de sobremesa. Además, no tiene un hilo conductor definido y muchas cosas pasan porque sí o no tienen sentido, para acabar con un final abierto y sin respuestas. Ya desde un inicio empecé a notar que tenía algo que no me gustaba, como que la protagonista sospecha de su hermana gemela sin ningún motivo, pero es que según avanzaba notaba más incoherencias y además tiene un ritmo lento, se repiten un montón de párrafos y de pensamientos de Ivy, que además de resultar cansinos son contradictorios, en un momento quiere a su hermana y al siguiente la odia, pero no pasa solo con ella, los demás personajes tienen el mismo fallo, son tremendamente volubles y manipulables y cada dos por tres cambian de opinión.
Un thriller psicológico juvenil que hace aguas por todos lados.
The Twin by Natasha Preston is a young adult psychological thriller about two twins, Ivy and Iris who are separated at the age of ten when their parents divorce. Ivy lives with her dad and Iris lives with her mom. They don’t have the twin bond that I so often hear about but because of the twins each visiting the other parent on off weekends and holidays/breaks, their sisterly bond isn’t strong.
"Somewhere over time and our parents' separation, our silly dreams died, and we stopped sharing any new ones." 'Do you want to talk, Iris?' Her haunted eyes look right through me. "I want so much more than that."
When the twins mother dies in a tragic accident, Iris comes to live with Ivy and her dad. This is when Ivy’s life begins to fall apart. Strange things start to happen to Ivy, things to discredit her and get her in trouble with her friends, her dad and at school but who’s causing all the trouble? Is Ivy losing her mind or is Iris trying to take over her life?
The Twin is darkly atmospheric and well-written, creepy and compelling. Although it was a tiny bit predictable, I still found it highly entertaining.
A big thank you to NetGalley, Random House Children’s, Delacorte Press, and Natasha Preston for providing me with a copy of The Twin in exchange for my honest review.
I received a free e-copy of The Twin by Natasha Preston from NetGalley for my honest review.
A story about identical twin girls who are not your usual twins. Years ago, their parents divorced. One sister stayed with their father, and the other with their mother. Their mom ends up dying and Iris moves in with her twin sister Ivy. Things start to go terribly wrong when one of the sisters has bad intentions.
“Looks good on you.” “That’s because I look like you.” “You were born first, so technically I look like you.” “Well, yeah. I’m the original and you’re the imposter.”
Where to even begin. I just ranted to my mom about it and her response was: Ya, doesn’t sound like something I would read or watch. And I said: Ya me either but it was somehow the worst and best book, I couldn’t DN- oh, stop reading it because I had to know what happened. My mom: Yup that’s usually how it goes with things like that, like watching a Halloween movie or something.
Well, I’ll go point by point I guess. So the plot is the only reason I did not DNF this book. I was too curious to find out Iris’s reasoning and plan, and too stubborn to stop reading it because I’m already behind on my Goodreads goal.
Despite all of my complaining to my friends, I did enjoy this book. It was terrible, but I loved the good-twin evil-twin thing. Ty and Ivy were really cute together. I was annoyed by the overwhelming high school cliches. I would not recommend this book unless you just want a quick weekend read, and uh, don’t have too high of expectations. I didn’t have any expectations going into it; The Twin was just an impulse buy from Walmart because I liked the cover.
Fool count (because we all know I love the word too much for my own good): 3 Pg 85: "I can get through, I can go to class and do the word, but I can't fool people." Pg 157: "I feel like a fool, freaking out over nothing." Pg 365: “Iris might have everyone fooled, but she can’t stop him from loving me.” Very annoyed that I can’t even call Ivy foolish because it's not that, she's just written so poorly
Random things I sent to my friends about this book: What the heck is stuffed-crust BBQ chicken pizza and why are they eating it while watching Iron Man * "Iris is crazy. She hasn't even apologized." You idiot Ivy you're an idiot * Prediction: Iris is going to make everyone think Ivy is insane and she's gonna be put in a mental hospital Update: Ayy I was right😐 * Ivy: you know I actually am hungry Dad: I knew you would crack when your stomach started making those noises Ivy: pancakes? Dad: you want them in shapes? Ivy: you just said that you understand that I'm growing up... Dad: all right normal pancakes it is Ivy: no I want little hearts Dad: I knew you were still in there Ivy: always * When she mentions something about Ty, she always follows up with "I love it." One time she even said "I love both." LITERALLY JUST THOSE THREE WORDS LIKE There's a message from Ty, asking how therapy went he sends the same text every Friday. I love it. Ok??? That's just ugh to me * Ok I'll stop now lol
I had high expectations for The Twin. When I read the synopsis I thought oh parent trap meets single white female. And it was a little like that, but it was a little like that, but it also wasn’t at all. First, this book is young adult, and I mean very young adult. The characters were all very immature and I had trouble connecting. Which lead me to my other issue, I just didn’t care about the characters. I think Ivy’s immediate dislike and suspicion of Iris is what really caused this book to not be as good as it could. The point of books like these is that the manipulative character even fools the protagonist for a while. Ivy’s immediate suspicions of Iris did make her seem a little crazy, and really just didn’t help her. The Twin was a great concept, but not super great execution. I couldn’t get into it and I really just didn’t care about Ivy as all. The ending also irritated me and I felt like there was no real resolution, which may have been the point, but I wanted more.
ೃ⁀➷ the characters are plain psychopaths, like how the heck did they all turn against their best friend/daughter/girlfriend that they have known forever because of something a random person they’ve known for three weeks said. i absolutely hated iris, and sophie, and haley, i basically hated everyone except for tyler, and he was a jerk at the end too. nothing really happens in this book, it’s mostly just ivy’s downward spiral into madness because of how psychologically manipulative iris was. i could feel her pain of nobody taking her side and the way literally no one believed her or even tried to hear her out, it made me so fricking mad. yes, maybe i would think she wasn’t completely right in the head either if i was put in this situation but i still would have believed my best friend over her psychotic twin sister. it wasn’t super thrilling but honestly i find mind manipulation really scary so a psychological thriller definitely has me hiding under my blankets. it was pretty fast paced, though not a lot happened in the plot until the end, i was able to fly through it in a day and it definitely wasn’t horrible by any means. i love this author because of how gripping and thought-provoking her books are. i did enjoy reading it but this one just wasn’t entirely for me.
ׂ╰┈➤ ”She’s not as innocent as she makes out, but, God, she is a master of manipulation. You know, half the school and everyone in town still believes her lies. Sweet Iris has now turned into poor, sweet Iris.”