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Book Reviews of Final Girls

Final Girls
Final Girls
Author: Riley Sager
ISBN-13: 9781101985366
ISBN-10: 1101985364
Publication Date: 7/11/2017
Pages: 352
Rating:
  • Currently 3.7/5 Stars.
 42

3.7 stars, based on 42 ratings
Publisher: Dutton
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

5 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Final Girls on + 3088 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
I was not impressed with this book, I admit I am a picky reader and a book has to grab me by page 50-100, this one does not, first of all I didn't like the title given to survivors of tragic events, it's like if you stump your toe then it's 'let's call ourselves The Clumsy Girls' etc. I just found it a silly scenario, then right off the bat I didn't like the main character, Quincy, I thought she was whiny, needy, depressing, and a coward and I don't for one minute think anyone will 'cling' to a cop for 10 years like she did but then that's a big part of this story.

I'm sure it will get rave reviews and that's okay but for me it just didn't hit the spot for a better rating
junie avatar reviewed Final Girls on + 630 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A compelling thriller with so many twists it felt like my insides turned into knots. I liked the character of Quincy, a girl who survived a massacre trying to forget it ever happened.
After going through many trials and tribulations meeting others who lived through similar situations, she found herself again fighting for her life.
And the ending; A surprise I never saw coming!
khami6cr avatar reviewed Final Girls on + 124 more book reviews
In college, Quincy Carpenter goes on vacation to a remote cabin (Pine Cottage) with a group of friends and ends up being the lone survivor to a massacre. The horrific event puts Quincy in the "Final Girls club"--so deemed by the press--a group of women who are also lone survivors of other similar massacres. Lisa survived a bloodbath at her sorority house and Samantha a brutal attack at a motel. The women have never met, but Quincy and Lisa have spoken on the phone. They all share two things--being a "final girl"--and trying to move on with their lives. And Quincy is really trying. With the help of Xanax, she has a successful baking blog and a good relationship with her understanding boyfriend, Jeff. But Quincy's attempts at moving past Pine Cottage are derailed when she receives a call that Lisa has died, found with her wrists cut in her bathtub. Shortly after, Samantha shows up at Quincy's apartment. Reporters are breathing down Quincy's neck and between Samantha and the press, Quincy feels forced to confront the past she's tried so hard to leave behind. But once she does, what will she really discover?

I had really high expectations for this novel, as the "first great thriller of 2017" blurb from Stephen King is prominently placed on the cover, and its been highly reviewed in a variety of magazines. Maybe I'm just a cynical soul, but it just didn't live up to the hype. For about the first 3/4 of the book, I just couldn't get into it, and I almost decided not to finish it. I actually started and finished another book between starting (and finishing) this one. The book switches between present day and flashbacks to Pine Cottage; the Pine Cottage portions were far more intriguing, and I just kept wanting to flip forward to those pieces.

Thankfully, the last fourth or so of this novel is much better: things pick up, the various parts come together in fairly dramatic fashion, and the story grows much more tense and hard to put down. It's the last portion of the book that makes it difficult to give it a truly negative review, even if I did find a few parts of it a tad unbelievable.

Indeed, you definitely have to suspend disbelief a bit for this one. Quincy is a pretty good character herself, but once Sam arrives, she sends Quincy on a path that is just hard to stomach. Quincy's reactions to Samantha and the actions she takes once she arrives irked me and often, I found them almost implausible. (Also, how gullible and unaware was Jeff?) Samantha was an unlikable character and she seemed to cloud everything she touched.

So, overall, I was a little disappointed by this one. I had to slog through a lot to get to the payout at the end and even then, it all seemed a little crazy and hard to buy. I liked Quincy well-enough, but no other characters in the novel were of much redeeming, or interesting, value. The story was fairly engaging, especially at the end, but not the shocking, amazing novel I'd hoped for. Alas. On to the next one! (And most people loved this, so take my review with a grain of salt!)

More at http://justacatandabookatherside.blogspot.com.
susieqmillsacoustics avatar reviewed Final Girls on + 1062 more book reviews
I really liked Sager's THE LAST TIME I LIED and while I liked this one, it didn't quite hit the mark. I wanted to know what really happened and that kept me reading but I felt it kept setting me up for something to happen only to be disappointed. By the time all is revealed, I had mostly come to expect who the murderer was and the twists in the end didn't surprise me.
reviewed Final Girls on + 70 more book reviews
I didn't enjoy this book as much as I expected to. I thought the pacing was slow. The ending did surprise me however.