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The Cruelty

Tekijä: Scott Bergstrom

Sarjat: The Cruelty (1)

JäseniäKirja-arvostelujaSuosituimmuussijaKeskimääräinen arvioMaininnat
17511155,539 (3.24)1
When seventeen-year-old Gwendolyn Bloom's father vanishes, she sets out across Europe under a new identity to bring him back alive, even if that means becoming as cruel as his captors.
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Näyttää 1-5 (yhteensä 11) (seuraava | näytä kaikki)
I loved the fast pace mystery. I was not super connected to the main character and i felt the ending was rushed. But it was a fast pace story. I just wanted more info in the end. ( )
  lmauro123 | Dec 28, 2023 |
I loved the fast pace mystery. I was not super connected to the main character and i felt the ending was rushed. But it was a fast pace story. I just wanted more info in the end. ( )
  lmauro123 | Dec 28, 2023 |
I received this book from Book Riot:
The book took me longer than I'd like. But when I finally invested my time to solely focus on reading it, I was floored. While it has the elements of a YA book, this story deviates from the love triangle. It doesn't need a dystopian future because the current world is bleak enough. And the best way to describe this book is to imagine Taken if the daughter went off to save her father. I suppose though that series/franchises are the it thing. That's the only disappointing part of this. That it's not over yet. ( )
  ennuiprayer | Jan 14, 2022 |
I have some mixed feelings about The Cruelty. Going into the first couple chapters, I liked it. I really did. I liked Gwendolyn Bloom in her role at the school, despite the fact that the role was technically still some of the most common YA stereotypes – “orphan” and “outcast” for a couple. But after the first chapter or two, I became less convinced. The beginning felt like a different book, a perceived vision of normality in order to slide the book into the YA genre by benefit of the character’s age and the fact that high school is mentioned, when in fact none of the rest of the book follows that line. It’s disappointing, because there was probably some storytelling potential here and there are definitely not enough spy thrillers in YA… but this isn’t a YA spy thriller. Not really. It’s just a thriller. Barely even spy.

Gwendolyn Bloom is flat as a pancake. The early days of her character development plateau as the story turns into a run around the world. Any vague attempts the writer makes to paint her as a relatable, multidimensional character fade away as he focuses on action instead of development. And you know what? Fine. That’s a choice, and many thrillers go with action over development. Character development isn’t the only victim to this choice – we lose a lot in world building and setting. The reader has no opportunity to become truly immersed in this book because we barely care about Gwendolyn, and each backdrop looks the same. Bergstrom could have taken the opportunity to do a bit of research and bring the unique cities to life, but instead, they all feel like silhouettes of New York. Again, disappointing.

Please keep in mind that I am coming at The Cruelty primarily as a reader of YA, not a thriller reader. I do read some thrillers, but The Cruelty was marketed as YA first, and I am far more versed in that genre.

Bergstrom’s writing isn’t bad – he has some skill. The language he used in writing the book was more nuanced and complicated than what I’m accustomed to reading, and I enjoyed that. That said, it’s another aspect that made The Cruelty seem more like a better read for someone in their twenties or thirties rather than a reader in their teens (the true audience for YA, lest we forget). There’s an imbalance between dialogue and narration, particularly later in the book. While again this isn’t uncommon in a thriller, it’s a choice that leads to less immersion.

Generally… I don’t know. I guess The Cruelty was fine, but it was also forgettable. There were moments that I deeply disliked. For example, in Prague Gwendolyn finds herself with Roman, a Yale-graduate son of a gangster king, and a homosexual. Within 24-hours of meeting him, Roman renounces his sexuality and while the word “gay” is never used in the book, the “f” word was used repeatedly. Roman’s sexuality was completely unrelated to the story and the whole aside felt almost like the author venting his own bigotries.

There are other small unrealities, although less offensive. One we hit about chapter five, I’d entirely forgotten that Gwendolyn was seventeen. She acts more like she’s twenty-five, at least. Plus there’s the whole Krav Maga training montage that takes her from a complete beginner to a trained expert in three weeks. Hair growing a couple of inches in less than a week. The passage of time is unrealistic and the things Gwendolyn accomplishes… if you stop and think about it for just a moment… don’t make sense. The Cruelty relies on the reader to get swept up in the action and not think about the story beyond that.

I don’t think I would particularly recommend The Cruelty? It’s not a world-endingly bad book, but it’s not impressive and there are definitely some cringe moments. As an aside, I guess when this came out Scott Bergstrom did an interview and a bunch of people boycotted the book afterward. In reviewing the article… I mean? He comes off as a pretentious prick who thinks too much of himself. I don’t think that’s enough to boycott a book? But there are the homophobic tones in the Prague section near the end, and there’s a lot of violence, so those are some good reasons to maybe pass this one by.

OMG I just re-read that article and it mentions that Gwendolyn is Jewish. She is, it’s mentioned a little in the beginning, and it 100% comes off as a diversity drop and is not good rep, or really any rep. So yeah. Don’t be fooled.

Also. 98% of all the women in this book are prostitutes. … Okay, I’m done. ( )
  Morteana | Mar 1, 2020 |
Listened to audio & loved it -10* fave! ( )
  EmpressReece | Mar 9, 2018 |
Näyttää 1-5 (yhteensä 11) (seuraava | näytä kaikki)
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When seventeen-year-old Gwendolyn Bloom's father vanishes, she sets out across Europe under a new identity to bring him back alive, even if that means becoming as cruel as his captors.

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