Ratings860
Average rating3.8
Realized it was awful after 50 pages, still read the next 275 because I was kinda hooked, only to be predictably disappointed by the end.
I´m surprised at the praise this book has gotten. I decided to read it because it´s present in every list I checked on GoodReads and the plot seemed interesting enough. As it turns out, it is just another book made at the expense of psychoanalysis always getting a bigger hype than it deserves and a writer who has not done their research and who only wants an easy story out of it.
The writing is boring. Both Alicia´s diary and Theo´s sections are written exactly the same way, almost as if the author was not able to voice convincing different characters. So much so, that at some point while reading, I thought possible one of the outcomes of the story would be that the diary had been faked by Theo in some odd plot twist. Theo is portrayed as a hero that comes in crashing every other therapist work and breaks through to Alicia within days. Alicia was in the hospital for, what? 6 years? And no therapist managed to make progress with her. Obviously by the end you can see that this progress was only due to Theo being the one that caused the issue in the first place. However, if you reflect on it, a few other things come to light:- Alicia had a traumatic childhood and the picture this book paints is that if you had a traumatic childhood you are on the brink of becoming irreparable and, apparently, a killer. - In 6 years nobody was able to help Alicia trust and communicate. So mental health is shown as something that stays static. Stale. Not only that, but mental institutions are also portrayed as places that just holds the patients in a prison-like manner. It takes an unstable psychotherapist to be hired for her medication doses and therapy treatment to even be reviewed. This is an inaccurate and frankly sad view of what mental health treatment is actually like in reality. - Alicia becomes a killer because of a combination of her childhood trauma and what she is put through by Theo. She also then becomes even more unstable by deciding not to talk in order to mirror a Greek myth. It again takes a unstable psychotherapist to look into her background and realise the connection between her naming the painting Alcestis and her real life experiences. What are all these other therapists at The Grove doing? None of the characters are well written, but the female ones are just a disgrace. To pick a few examples:- Stephanie is shown as this “stickler for the rules” who only hinders Theo´s methods. When he insists on being alone with Alicia while treating her and she attacks him, Stephanie tries to stop him from being alone with her again. Rather than getting support from her management colleagues, she gets interrupted and ignored by her counterpart Diomedes who decides Theo can continue as he was. Diomedes is represented as assertive, independent minded and a presence that Theo seeks when he wants advice. Funny how when then Alicia attacks another patient and Stephanie takes control of the situation, the description reads “Stephanie was standing with her arms crossed; her excitement was palpable. She´s getting off on this, I thought – being in charge, and having the last word – how she must have resented us all, overruling her, teaming up against her. Now she was relishing her revenge”. By insisting that protocols are followed that demonstrably protect both Theo and Alicia, Stephanie is not being assertive, she is “getting off” on her own authority. She isn´t independent minded, she is resentful and vengeful. The author has made such little effort to hide the plain sexism in his characters. - Indira – The sweet stereotypical maternal figure that always offers a kind smile. The only times she talks throughout the book is in group discussions where Theo´s methods are being questioned. Those times she is always there to say “I agree with Theo”. Surely if she was in agreement with the methods Theo is trying to introduce she would have already suggested them in the last 6 years? If she had, then this means it takes a strong white man to come in and actually get these methods applied. If she actually hadn´t, then she is just another female character put in place as a decorative vase to support a male character. - Alicia –Portrayed as a mystery that just doesn´t talk and needs to be saved (even if by the man that caused her issues in the first place) or portrayed (in her diaries) as someone that just sits at a café all day and only feels safe when she goes home to have sex with her partner (who she also paints a portrait of as JESUS CHRIST).
I could have given it the benefit of the doubt and maybe endured the sexism if the book had been written at a different time in history, but this was written in 2019 and I expect higher standards from both the author and the critical reception this book has received.
Maybe a more talented writer could have turn the plot into an enjoyable read, but this author was sadly not successful.
I've read this book twice. The first read through, I struggled to get past the first few chapters. It only gets interesting from the chapters Alicia gave the main character her diary. On the second read through, I waited and searched for any foreshadowing that would lead the reader to suspect the upcoming twist, but nada. The twist just came out of nowhere. Overall a meh read, I have no idea why I forced myself to read it again.
I don't think this book will stay with me for long, but it was an enjoyable ride. I think it holds together well and is worth a shot
Waffling between four and five stars, but there were a few things that made me go “ehhhh” that I'll go with four. But what a wild ride! Such good suspense and playing with assumptions. I figured it out slightly before the reveal but definitely thought it was other people and thought it was different than it was. (Don't mean to be vague but really don't want to be spoilery!) I flew through this, which I needed, and I may give Michaelides' other work a try now too because he tells a good story.
Hahahahaha. This book literally made me lol at the ridiculousness of it.
Was okay. Heavily twist-dependent, but if that's what you're looking for, it's worth the read.
this is a very hyped book but also a very hated book so i was wary... popular and hated? i'll probably hate it then right? wrong. I liked it! I loved the writing so much and the character development was great and i didn't guess what would happen half way through the book like i do with some mystery books and i only guessed 2 pages before it happened so yay?
the book creeped me out and actually scared me which was unexpected and i do think i'll have trouble shaking this story off me but that means it was a great read.... just a bit scary for me :((((
This one is a page-turner, for sure. I couldn't put it down after I got about a third of the way through. I finished it in a few hours as it reads quickly; it's mostly dialogue, written simply, and chapters are short. While I enjoyed it, and indeed can say I'm thoroughly creeped out as of this review (the darkness and ominous wind outside my window certainly don't help), I wouldn't call this a “nutritious” read. The author uses tired archetypes for the genre (thin, beautiful damsel; dark & mysterious protagonist; monstrous, fat, miserable aunt; etc etc) and as I said, the dialogue is pretty simple. This is total Hollywood bait. In fact, I'd be surprised if it isn't already optioned.
The problem with super hyped books is that sometimes they are a huge disappointment. However, it didn't happen with this book.
It. Was. Awesome!!
I'm relieved because it didn't let me down. The pace, the plot, the characters, everything was perfect. I can't wait the author's next novel!!
Such a good plot twist! Wanted to continue reading and never put it down. Had this on my shelf for at least a year but finally picked it up and I do not regret it!
Loved this book! The story was well told and the mystery wasn't revealed too soon, in fact I found myself thinking “What just happened???!!!” when it was revealed. Excellent read - can't wait to discuss with book club!
It was an okay book for me. The story was quite engaging but the resolution was too crazy for my liking.
👍🏽Pick it: if The Sinner and psychology is your jam.
👎🏽Skip it: if you're looking for a horror, not cerebral thriller.
I pride myself in pegging the plot twist. Even the best of thrillers tend to follow a loose, but calculable trajectory. When I hit that plot point in Silent Patient biting my tongue on spilling spoilers, I gasped out loud. Not because it's a dramatic reveal, but because the author rolled out the climax patiently, which personally, made this thriller stand alone. I've recommended this book to several who will back up the hype.
Summary: When Alicia Berenson is found at the scene of her husband’s murder, she doesn’t speak a word. She maintains her silence through the criminal investigation and court proceedings that follow, through her conviction and sentencing, and, so far, for the entirety of her institutionalization at The Grove. Psychologist Theo Faber, however, believes that he may be able to get to the bottom of what really happened between Alicia and her husband and get her to finally creak her silence.
This was one of those books that I kept seeing everywhere. So figured it was time to actually read it.
I was worried that it wouldn't live up to the hype in my head, I'm so glad I was wrong. A couple of the plot twists took me by surprise and I definitely didn't see the end coming. So I really really enjoyed it. Definitely one of those books I think everyone would enjoy
IM SO HAPPY I READ THIS !!!
the plot twist literally left me catching my damn breath on the floor. I literally GASPED.
and the ending ???? superb. id have cried & punched walls if what happened didn't happen.
the writing was also great, no unnecessary rambling, juste ce qu'il faut, did not feel bored at all.
no but imagine being so smart you create a chef d'œuvre like this ? damn god really has his favorites
Cracking twist at the end but a long build up
Hoping my title hasn't ruined any plot spoilers but I imagine everyone reading this book understands there's a twist. The writing isn't phenomenal and there's not a vast amount of action - but the fact I read this book in about 36 hours is a testament to how gripping it was. It really kept me hooked in and made me want to know the answer which was left very smartly on tentative hooks until the last few chapters.
I'd give it a 3.5 out of 5 stars. Some parts seemed completely pointless, and I was sitting there reading, thinking, “can we just get to the point? I get it, Alicia despises everyone in her life.”