Ratings80
Average rating3.9
500000/5 stars He had found her in a constellation.
Hey warning. There's spoilers. I forgot to mark them. Also I kinda get lost in thought with this review a bit so I kinda get off track but whatever. Thanks for reading and have a good day. Heart emoji and all that.
Do you know what? Let's just get personal here why don't we?
I was just shy of 19 years old when I read Eliza for the first time. I just finished my first year of college, where I had made a grand total of zero friends so far. I had decided to move into a new dorm room to see if I could get a fresh start. Make a friend. But the two girls that lived there already wanted nothing to do with me. I think part of it was because I didn't know how to talk to them because I have this little thing called social anxiety. I tried to make conversations, but I never know how to talk to people so the words I said didn't do any good. Those two girls had made it clear to me that they weren't going to be my friend, (because in all honesty, I do suck). Instead, I locked myself in my dorm room and read and read and read. I worked three days a week and talked to some people from Goodreads and that was about all the socialization that I had. College wasn't the best time of my life up until that point. (Don't worry though. It did get much better a few months later (right after the 3 year reading slump I'm still in started) when I got a new roommate who didn't care that I suck. We went to Disneyland and got matching tattoos. I went to her baby shower this weekend-she's doing great.)
So, when I read Eliza three years ago, it was one of the first times when I really saw myself in a character. Eliza was just a year younger than I was. Her friends and her life were online, just as mine had been. She was as passionate about her art as I was about writing book reviews (I wrote book reviews a lot back then). The way she described her thoughts and feelings reflected the same way I thought. Her thoughts would spiral just as mine always did. Her social anxiety reflected what mine was.
Then add in a plot and characters that I came to care a lot for in the 400 pages. I was proud of Eliza for the webcomic she created. My heart broke for Wallace when he wrote that email for his dad. I related to Emmy when she described how much she hated her teachers. Almost instantly, I was in love with this book. This book was a small beacon of hope to me that things change. Things get better even when it feels like everything sucked.
This book has always been filed away in my mind under “phenomenal read” I'm 21 now. It's been almost four years since I graduated from high school, which seems like so much longer than it really is. I used to read 100 books a year. For the past two and a half years, I've maybe read 30. And the past few years of my life, ever since I read Eliza, things have changed dramatically. Both for the good and the worst. That three-year slump hit. I moved back home from college. I took a break from schooling. I started working full time at a car dealership. My childhood dog died. My dad died. I got a niece (who's watching me type this and is really trying to either help me write this or eat my laptop. Who knows?). I started school again. And, most importantly, I finally get to see my one true love, Harry Styles, in concert in 133 days.
I mentioned this because, when I randomly picked up Eliza again yesterday, I was worried that I wouldn't love it as much. My social anxiety isn't as bad lately as it has been in the past. I am at a different state of life than Eliza was at this point. Maybe I won't relate to her as much as I used to? What if that is the reason why I loved this book so much and all that is gone?
But the answer is no. I still found myself in Eliza's thoughts. I loved following her to school and her home life and seeing the world through her eyes I loved getting to know more about her webcomic and how much she loved it. I love watching her slowly open up to someone new. I saw myself in Eliza in a way that I've never see myself. While I read, I didn't feel as alone as I still feel sometimes when I don't know how to talk to someone or why I keep thinking about the worst-case scenario even though nothing bad even happened.
I love the writing. I love the plot. I just love this book.
And even this time around, I've connected to other characters that I didn't really connect to the first time around. After the death of my own dad, I understand Wallace's desire to not speak. Being slightly older than 19, I understand her parents desire a little more than I did when I first read this. I get why they want her to open up a bit more. They care.
Eliza and Her Monsters is one of those books that reminds me why I love books so much. It reminds me of what I've been missing lately when I don't read. I posted when I started this book that I just needed quality content in my life and I meant it. I needed something that I knew would make me happy.
In conclusion, book is good. A good representation of mental health imho. Eliza is great. Wallace is great. Must read.
Anyways, sorry about getting a bit personal. I know you don't really care. Sorry this review isn't very detailed about the book either. Also, sorry there's no gifs. I couldn't find ones to fit. Thanks for reading. Byeeee.
AAAHHHHH I REALLY LIKED THIS
I love this book to the moon and back. The mental illness rep is just...chef's kiss. Eliza is such a relatable character for so many different reasons. I loved the web comic, the writing, the characters and the relationships between them (also internet friendships!!! my heart is soaring!!!). The family dynamic was really realistic, at least to me, who pretty much hates her family lol.
What I didn't like was how Wallace acted in the last act of this book. It really drove me mad. Fuck that shit. I was really rooting for him up until he went ahead and pulled that BS :/
AAAHHHHH I REALLY LIKED THIS
I love this book to the moon and back. The mental illness rep is just...chef's kiss. Eliza is such a relatable character for so many different reasons. I loved the web comic, the writing, the characters and the relationships between them (also internet friendships!!! my heart is soaring!!!). The family dynamic was really realistic, at least to me, who pretty much hates her family lol.
What I didn't like was how Wallace acted in the last act of this book. It really drove me mad. Fuck that shit. I was really rooting for him up until he went ahead and pulled that BS :/
I am usually not put off by over hyped books, and I actually enjoy reading them. And I have never really been disappointed by one either but this book was definitely a let down.
Eliza is a typical anti-social teenager in high school who doesn't have friends or a very strong relationship with her family because she doesn't really talk to anyone. But she has an online secret. She is the anonymous creator of a very famous webcomic and is friends with two of her website admins. Then enters Wallace, a new kid in her class who also happens to be the most famous fanfiction writer of her webcomic. She finally opens up to him but never reveals her truth. What follows is the story of the consequences when her anonymity is busted.
Eliza suffers from anxiety and panic attacks and it was hard for me to relate to that side of her. I really liked the depiction of the fandom, her online friends Max and Emmy and also her struggle with finding motivation to continue her comic for the sake of its fans. I think it was very realistic and probably many authors struggle with such issues. But though I understand her issues with anxiety, I couldn't empathize with her. She blames her parents for not understanding her but when they try, she is very rude and doesn't even try to talk to them. Her brothers obviously love her but don't know how to talk to her because she keeps them at a distance too. She doesn't even try but blames everyone else for being indifferent. Wallace as a character is also pretty boring and comes across as self-obsessed and very rude towards her when the truth is revealed. Also, the little tidbits of her webcomic felt more like fillers and didn't add anything to the story.
The book wasn't really bad and I really wanted to finish it too in the hopes that it would get better, but couldn't like it very much at the end because I couldn't connect with the characters.
“There are monsters in the sea.”
These YA authors are really milking mental health issues aren't they? How to make money writing YA, 2017 edition:
1. Choose some trendy buzzwords:
> mental health (no knowledge of the subject required, just your bullshit opinion on it)
> fandoms (write some crappy backstory, yeah, yeah, it's really popular, we'll just take your word for it)
> dramatic romance [love conquers all, including anxiety, depression (where can I get my hands on some of this fix-all permanent solution?)]
2. Promote the hell out of it on every BookTube channel. No decent writing skills required, people will eat it all up because aren't made up teenage introverts who believe the world starts and ends with them the cutest thing eveeer?
What's so heartwarming about this girl being such an asshole to her parent and her brothers? Or being so addicted to her web series and her fandom that she loses touch with reality and she spirals into anxiety and depression? What's so cute about her boyfriend throwing a tantrum and urging her to finish said web series just so he could get a book deal? On the book he's writing based on the story SHE created. Especially when it's clear that she's unwell. And what's so cute about the fact that she just brushes her suicide attempt because her boyfriend finally forgives her? But it's all good because they're together and she finishes the web comic and and they live happily ever after?
Eliza is the least interesting part of this book for a while – when you're a depressed introvert with social anxiety, that'll happen. What do artists owe their fans? When does the act of creation take you away from the rest of your life? Can people get off George RR Martin's behind?
Maybe it's the teen girl in me hidden in the well-into-adulthood woman, but I like when Eliza's brothers school her parents about just how colossally they messed up.
I really enjoyed this story. It made me laugh and cry what a creative story.
This was such an amazing book to me. I normally don't read contemporary books but this has just opened my eyes to the genre and now I want to read more. Eliza is such an amazing character and one I can relate to when it comes to anxiety, panic attacks, and being so consumed in what others think of you that you feel like you want to disappear so no one knows you exist. The ending was amazing and most importantly realistic. I absolutely loved it. This books is a must read.
2.7/5
Felt flat, but I can say this is the best of the fandom-based books I've read so far.