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lisaluvsliterature 's review for:

Delicious Monsters by Liselle Sambury
5.0
dark emotional mysterious sad tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

I was so excited for this because I loved the author’s first two books. And I was hooked right from the start with this one too! Although I have to say there were a few parts with a white worm or maggot that kept popping up when I was trying to read this on a lunch break or at dinner, and that was not helpful to my eating.

The story kind of alternated between the character Daisy and her story, and another character named Brittney about 10 years later, who had a connection to the house that Daisy moves to in her part of the story. It wasn’t a split up evenly back and forth, just the part with Brittney was split in kind of at times when we needed to be left with a little suspense and wondering how it might have affected the future. There were so many layers to this story. Sure, it was a ghost/horror story, but also so much about the human story and the horrible things people do to each other, even those they say they love.

The ghost/horror aspect of the story was so good. I could see this coming to life on a movie screen, or a tv show. And there would be a lot of the atmospheric and visual scares, but a few jumps in there as well. The family and drama was emotional and horrific in its own way as well. There were several bits that just rang out so true as I read. With what had happened to the girls early on in the house’s story, that got me. Even with Daisy’s experiences with her ex boyfriend that she started the story having been broken up with him, that got me. One section, and I know of course it may change before final publication, but this line:

“When she said that she had let it happen before, so how could she say no later?”

I feel that with my own experience. In fact I probably took the not saying no to an extreme later, and I get that this feeling right here is part of why I let myself go that way.

Another thing that was so true in my opinion was about having different groups of friends because they are for different reasons or parts of your life. I remember having friends in lots of different groups in high school, but not necessarily a “group of friends”, and they were all from different aspects of my school years. Some remained close friends, most grew apart, and others that weren’t that close of friends, more acquaintances, I talk to more on Facebook now than we ever did back then. Even in my life today, I have friends that I see around my family, friends at work, friends from college, etc. I think everyone probably does this.

All the characters were so well fleshed out and added to the story in so many ways. While I had a feeling the first surprise we learn about Ivy was going to be what it was, I was not prepared for more of what we learned about her later in the story. I really liked King as well. And it was so true what he said about how knowing things and that people never did what he suggested, or took his advice. I mean how often do people try to give me advice and I know that I am going to end up doing what I want no matter what. It was hard to like Daisy’s mom, but knowing what she went through was helpful and gave me sympathy for her. Now we didn’t really get a chance to know Brittney’s mom, and that’s okay because I don’t know that she would have been likable. Meeting Daisy’s aunt finally and wow, that was something that I’d been wondering all throughout the story, and it was added into the plot perfectly.

I could gush and go on and on about how much I liked this story. Now, it is long, 500 pages, but I was kept on the edge of my seat the whole time. Another winning story from Liselle Sambury, who is fast becoming one of my favorite authors.