Review: The Girl In Between by Laekan Kemp
Posted: 30 Nov 2015, 23:27
I put this in the 'Young Adult' forum, as the main character is seventeen, and has a typical teenage life, except for one thing: she has a sleep disorder where she falls asleep for weeks at a time. She is the only one with the disorder to actually "go somewhere" consciously with her memories in her head (not dreams) instead of just sleep, and the book starts out with a boy somehow coming into her space of memories. During the length of the book, she has to figure out if he's real and if so, how can she find him? Based upon some of these elements, this book could also be classified as a sci-fi or a fantasy.
I gave this book 3 stars - I thought the plot idea was quite original, and there were enough twists and turns to keep me guessing. The book also ends with a bit of a cliffhanger, with some questions unanswered, but still enough that I felt like the book was complete. This book is the first of a 3 book series.
I would have given this 4 stars, but there were some writing quirks that made this harder than most for me to read. I had to re-read the beginning again the next day to fully understand what was happening. There were some characters that I felt were under-developed, with some facts that would be useful to the reader to connect emotionally with the main character. For example, the main character has an episode right after a fight with her boyfriend, and wakes up to find that he has already moved on. The author glanced over that and didn't provide the reader with any kind of raw emotion felt by the main character - anger, confusion, jealousy, love, hate? It felt like the main character had no chemistry with any of the supporting characters.
With that being said, I thought it was a really interesting book, and I look forward to reading the next one.
I gave this book 3 stars - I thought the plot idea was quite original, and there were enough twists and turns to keep me guessing. The book also ends with a bit of a cliffhanger, with some questions unanswered, but still enough that I felt like the book was complete. This book is the first of a 3 book series.
I would have given this 4 stars, but there were some writing quirks that made this harder than most for me to read. I had to re-read the beginning again the next day to fully understand what was happening. There were some characters that I felt were under-developed, with some facts that would be useful to the reader to connect emotionally with the main character. For example, the main character has an episode right after a fight with her boyfriend, and wakes up to find that he has already moved on. The author glanced over that and didn't provide the reader with any kind of raw emotion felt by the main character - anger, confusion, jealousy, love, hate? It felt like the main character had no chemistry with any of the supporting characters.
With that being said, I thought it was a really interesting book, and I look forward to reading the next one.