Ratings5
Average rating4
Reviews with the most likes.
Screeching delight. Favorite book of the year. Ten stars. That may just be my currently-more-angry-than-usual joints (courtesy of the stupid miserable weather we keep getting lately) speaking, or it could be the character with my same joint disorder, or it could genuinely just be an amazing book.
If you're not here for stupid in-jokes and group chats, you probably won't like this one, but I super loved it.
My husband suffers from a chronic illness, so I was excited to see a book that took a reader into that world. I was so pleased with this book! These characters are real people struggling with their illness and making a life around it. The conversations, the struggles, and the “life after” were realistic. They weren't sugar coated, nor were they helpless. They struggled to ask for help and still made real connections and real friendships. I think the friendships were the best part of the book. I loved it!
This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader as part of a quick-takes catch up post. The point is to catch up on my “To Write About” stack—emphasizing pithiness, not thoroughness..
—
It's really bothering me that I haven't gotten a full post out of this yet—and it's been long enough (and I lost my notes) that anything I end up saying will be super vague and would be too much work to get a longer post.
In a Discord support for chronic illnesses, a group of people from around the world from a variety of age groups, come together to share struggles common to people with a variety of ailments and disorders. A couple of them realize they live nearby and strike up a friendship. Eventually, one of them disappears from contact for too long, so the other takes it upon herself to go try to find her friend IRL.
It turns out that this friend's chronic illness is a case of lycanthrophy—things get strange and heartwarming from there.
A lot of this is told in modern-epistolary: texts, emails, Discord chats, tumblr posts, etc., etc. I loved the jumble of methods used to tell the story. It really captures the feel for these characters and their lives.
If you look at places like Goodreads, you'll see a lot of controversy about elements of this book. I didn't know about any of it until I'd read the book. 96% of what I saw doesn't reflect the book, and seems to stem from one or two people who hadn't read the book. Ignore it all.
This was a fun, earnest story that addresses serious things like living with chronic disease and finding your place in the world along with silly things like Lycanthropy and excessive binge-watching with friends. A nice break from reality that maybe helps you think about some things.