The Girl Next Door
Books | Fiction / Horror
3.7
(392)
Jack Ketchum
In suburbia in the 1950s, a dark side emerges for teenage Meg and her crippled sister--captive to an Aunt, who is descending into madness. ""The Girl Next Door" is alive--in a way most works of popular fiction never attain; it does not just promise terror but actually delivers it. "--Stephen King.
Teen Romance
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Author
Jack Ketchum
Pages
250
Publisher
Overlook Connection Press
Published Date
2003
ISBN
1892950618 9781892950611
Community ReviewsSee all
"I'm so conflicted on how to rate and review this book. It deals with heavy topics, and it's very disturbing. However, it's haunting, and has a good overall message.<br/><br/>It's based on the story of Sylvia Likens, which I heard about for the first time on My Favorite Murder last year. I listen/watch/read a lot of true crime, and this was one that stuck with me. The Girl Next Door was a pretty good retelling. <br/><br/>Speaking as a reformed mean girl, this book is an excellent representation of the escalation of bullying, and how people feed off of one another's negative energy. This quote from the book is a perfect summary: "I began to learn that anger, hate, fear, and loneliness are all one button awaiting the touch of just a single finger to set them blazing toward destruction. And I learned that they can taste like winning." <br/><br/>This book may be seen as torture **** (think Hostel or Saw), but I think it does show that bullying ends badly, and that's a valuable lesson to learn. I also see it as a good example of how saying silent can be just as bad as the injustices committed by others. Stand up when you see something before it ends in tragedy."
"I don’t think I’ve ever read a book that made my blood boil as much as this one. Based on the horrible true story of Sylvia Likens, who was placed in the care of a truly sadistic woman alongside her sister, The Girl Next Door takes a look at what this crime might have been like through the eyes of a neighborhood boy, Davy. <br/><br/>As the cruelties escalated, I felt myself getting more and more frustrated, wanting someone (anyone!) to help this girl despite knowing that nobody would. Meg would get no help, because no one saved Sylvia. <br/><br/>The dichotomy between Davy wanting to participate in Meg’s torture and viewing her as an outlet for everyone’s sickest fantasies and then suddenly being ashamed and wanting to help Meg once she spoke and basically “became a person again” in Davy’s eyes made me so angry that I had to put the book down. I caught myself thinking that people couldn’t possibly be cruel enough to do the kinds of things that Ketchum was describing, but then I remembered. People can and are cruel enough to participate in every one of those despicable acts. It was done to Sylvia Likens by those who were supposed to protect her. <br/><br/>Ketchum does a great job of portraying just how quickly things can escalate from snide remarks to unimaginable abuse all while people who call themselves friends of the abused watch and then begin to participate in said abuse. He shows just how cruel even children can be, when spurred on by their peers and the “cool” parent. I definitely left this story with a bad taste in my mouth and a decidedly reduced faith in humanity."
"This book was pretty dang good. I finished it in three days which makes perfect sense because it kept me on my toes! The book has parallel storylines between Emma and the mysterious "Him". The first half of the book was a bit confusing. I couldn't figure out how the two were linked which I'm sure was the point but I didn't like the set up. It wasn't until maybe 3/4 of the way through that "Him" made more sense. Regardless it was still a good story with an interesting ending."
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