review

DARK ROOMS – LILI ANOLIK

Dark RoomsDark Rooms by Lili Anolik
My rating: 3/5 cats
One StarOne StarOne Star

unlike The Secret History, this book has some problems.

i was prepared for it, since so many of the reviews on here have been thumbs-down; people expecting a donna tartt or a gillian flynn and getting something altogether different. and i can’t say i hated it – it’s a very fast read, and it was a fine summer diversion, but it takes some frustrating shortcuts down build-the-suspense road.

nica baker is sixteen when she is murdered on the grounds of chandler academy, a prep school in hartford, connecticut. shortly thereafter, another student kills himself, leaving an incriminating suicide note and the case is officially closed. nica’s older sister grace; the shy and cautious opposite to her wild and popular whirlwind, was about to go off to college, but nica’s death has rocked her out of orbit and into grief allayed by the narcotizing arms of prescription medication. while her parents fight, drink, and separate, grace makes a lousy decision to attend nica’s ex’s fourth of july party dressed as nica, and wakes up the next day hungover, newly deflowered, and pregnant with no memory of the sexual act, but with a memory of seeing nica’s ghost.

she makes herself a deal – she will either find nica’s real killer before her first trimester elapses, and abort the baby, or if she fails, she will raise the baby as a sort of apology/tribute to nica’s memory.

so, off she goes, in all her 17-year-old investigative fervor, and she discovers all of nica’s secrets along with some of her own.

the other blurb on this is Megan Abbott meets Twin Peaks.

i’m not sure where the twin peaks comes into play here. except in the “pretty popular high school girl with sexual secrets gets murdered.” which is not a concept owned by david lynch. although i did like where grace points out the cliché of it all, especially her deflating of the “homecoming queen” mythos.

for the most part, it’s a fun and twisty thriller. some of it is predictable, some less so. it’s one of those “everyone’s got secrets, so everyone’s a suspect” stories, and i think anolik did a good job strewing suspicion all over the place. the problem is an over-reliance upon surfacing memories. grace spent the period following nica’s death abusing prescription medication, so she has very few clear memories of that hazy time and she has filled in the blanks with assumptions that are mostly inaccurate. and every time she uncovers a clue or a secret, she suddenly remembers an incident that supports or enhances this “new” knowledge. you can get away with that technique once in a book. use it more than that and it starts feeling contrived. (see blair’s review for a better version of what i have just said – of how Grace seems to experience memories like other people experience seizures.)

so it’s things like that, and the fact that this doesn’t read at all like the voice of a seventeen-year-old (i had to keep reminding myself of the ages of most of the characters – it definitely read more college than high school), and the implausibilities in clue-gathering (how would grace have ascertained the romantic significance of nica’s tattoo on first sight?), and some stereotypes in the ethnic blue-collar characters, that made me less of a fan of the book.

however, there are some things that i thought were great, particularly the relationship between nica and her mother, a sally mann-ish photographer who has obsessively chronicled nica’s adolescence in all its tender fumblings and provocative adult posturings. and even though i’d guessed this particular reveal, the scene in the studio was fabulous. huge. generally, all the scenes centered around the family were great – the pressures, the grief, the awkwardness between grace and her father as even basic communication became impossible – it was all incredibly realistic and sad.

and then there’s the scene in which grace becomes pregnant, which seems to be the one that kills the book for many readers. and i completely understand – View Spoiler »

but overall, it’s a fine debut. it has some bumps, but it has strengths to balance them. i always enjoy boarding school murder mysteries, and this one was far from the worst i have read. i liked it, bumps and all.

read my reviews on goodreads

previous
next
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Amazon Disclaimer

Bloggycomelately.com is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon properties including but not limited to, amazon.com, or endless.com, MYHABIT.com, SmallParts.com, or AmazonWireless.com.

Donate

this feels gauche, but when i announced i was starting a blog, everyone assured me this is a thing that is done. i’m not on facebook, i’ve never had a cellphone or listened to a podcast; so many common experiences of modern life are foreign to me, but i’m certainly struggling financially, so if this is how the world works now, i’d be foolish to pass it up. any support will be received with equal parts gratitude and bewilderment.

To Top