Ratings35
Average rating3.9
When her high-achieving 15-year-old daughter Amelia supposedly commits suicide after she is caught cheating, litigation lawyer and single mother Kate Baron, leveled by grief, must reconstruct the pieces of Amelia's life to find the truth and vindicate the memory of the daughter whose life she could not save. 100,000 first printing.
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This book was recommended to my again by my mum, read the blurb on Amazon and thought it sounded an interesting idea for a plot. A high flying lawyer and single mother Kate receives a phone call from her daughters exclusive school saying she's being suspended for cheating. By the time she reaches the school to collect her daughter she finds that Amelia has thrown herself off the school roof. What follow's is Kate's journey to discover what happened, did her daughter commit suicide or did something more sinister happen?
People have compared this book to Gillian Flynn's Gone Girl, personally I didn't see the connection. The storyline's are vastly different. Whereas Flynn wrote a quite twisted storyline in Reconstructing Amelia it's much more realistic and there is more about the intricate social changes in the lives of teenagers today thanks to social media.
I really loved Reconstructing Amelia, it built beautifully as a story. From the moment Kate begins to suspect that her daughter didn't jump we are drawn along as she delves into the mind of her teen. Written through chapters that flit between being told through the eyes of Kate, Amelia, Social Networking snippets and flashbacks it makes for compelling reading. Amelia is a character who you truly like and root for, she's pulled into a difficult situation and makes some questionable choices but you never give up wanting to change the outcome you know is inevitable.
Kate's character is also written incredibly well, a workaholic who's daughter is a troubled teen can sometimes be a hard sell like ability wise but Kate know's her shortcomings and therefore you forgive her and learn to sympathise with her, you can feel her pain at having to learn about her teenage daughter only after she is gone.
If asked to choose which book out of Gone Girl and Reconstructing Amelia I'd recommend I wouldn't hesitate in saying this is the better read. It falls a little more into the teen fiction genre than Gone Girl and again I'd reiterate that subject matter wise they are quite different but this for me was the more satisfying read. it reached a conclusion that was believable and tragic though it was it made sense. It was a gripping and well written read and well worth a try.
I've said it before and I'll say it again: I'm so glad I didn't go to high school.
This book has been on my TBR since 2016 and I finally spotted it at my local used bookstore. I was in the midst of reading my least favorite genre, a classic, but I've been in a slump for about a month and a half. I heard this one was un-put-downabble so I started it in the hopes that it would get me out of my slump. And reader, I chose well. My official rating for this is 3.5 stars, but since we live in 1995 apparently and Amazon hasn't caught up to the fact that we could have half stars on here, three it is.
Let me start by saying I had the impression that this was a psychological thriller and it's not. It's a straight up mystery. And usually, I don't like mysteries as I read so many at a young age that I find them all predictable now. I'm super picky and I'm just gonna admit that's why I didn't give this a great rating. I found it predictable, yes. Definitely. BUT it wasn't boring. I could not, in fact, put it down. It's 1:30 AM and I've just finished it. It's like even though I knew I was not gonna be shocked and scandalized by the final twists, I still had to read it. The writing isn't anything spectacular but it is gripping. I had to know what happened at all times. The storyline is very high school, specifically rich high schoolers, which is maybe worse. There are some emotional moments (even if they seem forced).
But mainly, we all wanna know, why did smart, successful Amelia die that day? Did she jump off the roof of her school or was she pushed? And so ensues the chaos of reading through a teenager's texts/emails/social media to figure out what was missed and what was really going on in her life.
And as always, teenagers lie and live double lives. I truly do not like teenagers (sorry if you are one, pal.) and this was a lil awful to read just because they're kind of the worst and it's the worst part of life. I'm just gonna end this review because I'm just rambling now.
Would I recommend?
If you like mysteries and are not easily bored by them, yes, you'd probably really enjoy this one.
I don't trust people. All they want to do is to put a label on you. Call you this or that. Then that's all you are, forever.