yeah, I get what the author was trying to do but it just made Carly a weaker character as a result... I think she just handled this part very poorly.Howlan wrote: ↑22 Feb 2020, 09:01She did that because she felt that Adam needs to turn over a new leaf in this life and that is all good save the fact that you can not run away from the consequences of your actions.Chelsearoses wrote: ↑18 Feb 2020, 17:07That is a good point with Carly, him pre-Carly and her doing what she thought was best for him. So you have a good point on that. She created that closure I guess in a sense for him so he didn't have to perhaps?
Terry
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Re: Anyone else want more justice for Terry??
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I think I would have liked/accepted it better if the author did it in a way that condemned that type of relationship... I never felt like the author wanted the reader to see their relationship as unhealthy, more like trying to paint a "love conquers all" type thing.Jocelyn Eastman wrote: ↑22 Feb 2020, 18:01I don’t think a main character has to be likable as much as they have to be engaging. Adam going full villain may have been more engaging, but their unhealthy relationship was also interesting to watch evolve. It’s not that I liked it or loved it, as a reader it made me think.Jac-o-lantern wrote: ↑22 Feb 2020, 04:20 I do not think that the Terry situation was handled well. Her poor family was left without any closure and the story just moved on. I think that paints Carly and Adam in a really bad light considering they're the main characters and supposed to be likeable.
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right? I would think a protagonist would lose a little bit of sleep over someone he accidentally/purposely killed...Howlan wrote: ↑22 Feb 2020, 08:56Yes, here we have the protagonist of a story that really does not make sense!Nym182 wrote: ↑21 Feb 2020, 16:58I don't think Adam even learned a lesson from it!! Not with Carly covering it up... He didn't even seem to feel bad about it other than in the context that Carly might find out and break up with him...ciecheesemeister wrote: ↑10 Feb 2020, 16:35 I thought the overall attitude towards Terry was terrible. It was kind of like "so what if this boring ordinary girl died as long as the important Special Boy learned a lesson from it?" This part of the story definitely didn't sit well with me.
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Sometimes, it's difficult to cater to all strata of readers. You just have to decide what message you want to strongly deliver through your book. I perfectly understandable your sentiment.Nym182 wrote: ↑24 Feb 2020, 13:14My problem is the author seems to not have any issue with it! I feel like she wanted to create a "love conquers all" type of relationship between Adam and Carly, like the reader should see their relationship as a goal and does nothing to acknowledge how unhealthy their relationship actually is.That Reviewer wrote: ↑22 Feb 2020, 01:29I agree that it doesn't happen in an ideal, normal, or healthy relationship. But the sad truth is that these kinds of relationships are proliferating in our time and day.Jocelyn Eastman wrote: ↑21 Feb 2020, 12:44
I love that your name matches up with what your response is lol.
On some level, yes, Adam does not want this to mess up his romance with Carly. I think he doesn’t want this to mess up anything. That’s why he hid it.
I think what most people are puzzled by is Carly’s response. That he almost raped a girl, was involved in her death, has an obsession with his mom, has a serial killer like den and she just...keeps it a little secret?
I mean these aren’t secrets of a normal relationship. Nor is it really a healthy relationship.
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A valid point. The main character should be interesting. And rest is up to the author's creativity.Jocelyn Eastman wrote: ↑22 Feb 2020, 18:01I don’t think a main character has to be likable as much as they have to be engaging. Adam going full villain may have been more engaging, but their unhealthy relationship was also interesting to watch evolve. It’s not that I liked it or loved it, as a reader it made me think.Jac-o-lantern wrote: ↑22 Feb 2020, 04:20 I do not think that the Terry situation was handled well. Her poor family was left without any closure and the story just moved on. I think that paints Carly and Adam in a really bad light considering they're the main characters and supposed to be likeable.
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Yes, the author should bring it back later in the story and make Adam face his consequences.Nym182 wrote: ↑24 Feb 2020, 13:09But I do think the story ends up worse for that fact by tying up that loose end by having Carly burn down all the evidence and then forgetting the whole thing. The den and Terry were poorly handled by the author and did more harm to the story then good.Chelsearoses wrote: ↑21 Feb 2020, 19:31That's what seems to make sense to me. You're right, he was prepared to go down that dark path, considering how out of his way he was going. To drive there, miss the turns, drive all the way out. I mean the fact that he had that place in itself says a lot.
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Yes, it was poorly handled. Carly should think about the fact that Terry has people who cared about her.Nym182 wrote: ↑24 Feb 2020, 13:11I absolutly detested the way the author handled the den and Terry. It also made Carly seem weaker as a character as she had no qualms about just covering it up and not even talking to him about it.Chelsearoses wrote: ↑21 Feb 2020, 19:38That's a fair point to add. It's a little frustrating for me because he is more inconsistent and unbelievable to an extent but also sometimes people are, even in books and life. But for this book...I don't know, maybe he could have been inconsistent with some characteristics or certain things....but still be believable as a character...I don't know ha...AntonelaMaria wrote: ↑18 Feb 2020, 17:13
But I would add that only made him more inconsistent and unbelievable as a character.
I know sometimes in books some characters stay inconsistent and unbelievable but maybe not a leading character? Maybe in future books, he becomes more so?? More stable perhaps?
Has anyone read the next book? "Split Adam"?
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Yes true! and she took the hairpin and just when I thought she will confront Adam about it she burns the whole shed!Nym182 wrote: ↑24 Feb 2020, 13:14My problem is the author seems to not have any issue with it! I feel like she wanted to create a "love conquers all" type of relationship between Adam and Carly, like the reader should see their relationship as a goal and does nothing to acknowledge how unhealthy their relationship actually is.That Reviewer wrote: ↑22 Feb 2020, 01:29I agree that it doesn't happen in an ideal, normal, or healthy relationship. But the sad truth is that these kinds of relationships are proliferating in our time and day.Jocelyn Eastman wrote: ↑21 Feb 2020, 12:44
I love that your name matches up with what your response is lol.
On some level, yes, Adam does not want this to mess up his romance with Carly. I think he doesn’t want this to mess up anything. That’s why he hid it.
I think what most people are puzzled by is Carly’s response. That he almost raped a girl, was involved in her death, has an obsession with his mom, has a serial killer like den and she just...keeps it a little secret?
I mean these aren’t secrets of a normal relationship. Nor is it really a healthy relationship.
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Yes, the sex den was bad but its cover-up was worse!!Nym182 wrote: ↑24 Feb 2020, 13:17I agree, and they tied up the Terry loose end by having Carly burn down the den and all the evidence... and his shrine to his mother... I assume it's the author trying to symbolize Carly burning the evil out of Adam and making him a better person, but you are right, it just makes the two lead characters worse!Jac-o-lantern wrote: ↑22 Feb 2020, 04:20 I do not think that the Terry situation was handled well. Her poor family was left without any closure and the story just moved on. I think that paints Carly and Adam in a really bad light considering they're the main characters and supposed to be likeable.
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Yeah he is way too narcissistic for that!Nym182 wrote: ↑24 Feb 2020, 13:17yeah, scared is not how I describe Adam at all hahaHowlan wrote: ↑22 Feb 2020, 08:55Yes definitely outrageous. Though most serial killers are victims of abuse or such nothing was the case with Adam. So portraying Adam as scared really made no sense.Nym182 wrote: ↑21 Feb 2020, 16:22
That's my feeling as well... and portraying Adam as a scared young man sits a little funny in my stomach... He made the choice to abduct Terry, so I don't feel bad that he's afraid of how that's gonna go over with Carly.
And I agree that Carly shouldn't have covered up his secret so he can have a fresh start.
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Yes I definitely agree with you. She was the sensible girl in the story. For her to make such a bad decision surely put her character down.Nym182 wrote: ↑24 Feb 2020, 13:21yeah, I get what the author was trying to do but it just made Carly a weaker character as a result... I think she just handled this part very poorly.Howlan wrote: ↑22 Feb 2020, 09:01She did that because she felt that Adam needs to turn over a new leaf in this life and that is all good save the fact that you can not run away from the consequences of your actions.Chelsearoses wrote: ↑18 Feb 2020, 17:07
That is a good point with Carly, him pre-Carly and her doing what she thought was best for him. So you have a good point on that. She created that closure I guess in a sense for him so he didn't have to perhaps?
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Yeah, an interesting approach from the author. Breaking away the stereotypical YA protagonists.Nym182 wrote: ↑24 Feb 2020, 13:25I think I would have liked/accepted it better if the author did it in a way that condemned that type of relationship... I never felt like the author wanted the reader to see their relationship as unhealthy, more like trying to paint a "love conquers all" type thing.Jocelyn Eastman wrote: ↑22 Feb 2020, 18:01I don’t think a main character has to be likable as much as they have to be engaging. Adam going full villain may have been more engaging, but their unhealthy relationship was also interesting to watch evolve. It’s not that I liked it or loved it, as a reader it made me think.Jac-o-lantern wrote: ↑22 Feb 2020, 04:20 I do not think that the Terry situation was handled well. Her poor family was left without any closure and the story just moved on. I think that paints Carly and Adam in a really bad light considering they're the main characters and supposed to be likeable.
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Yes, he should have at least felt guilty about it!
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A valid point. It is never possible to cater to all needs.That Reviewer wrote: ↑24 Feb 2020, 23:55Sometimes, it's difficult to cater to all strata of readers. You just have to decide what message you want to strongly deliver through your book. I perfectly understandable your sentiment.Nym182 wrote: ↑24 Feb 2020, 13:14My problem is the author seems to not have any issue with it! I feel like she wanted to create a "love conquers all" type of relationship between Adam and Carly, like the reader should see their relationship as a goal and does nothing to acknowledge how unhealthy their relationship actually is.That Reviewer wrote: ↑22 Feb 2020, 01:29
I agree that it doesn't happen in an ideal, normal, or healthy relationship. But the sad truth is that these kinds of relationships are proliferating in our time and day.