I read The Female of the Species because I
wanted to. I liked the cover and its eye catching color but it was just any
other book I picked up at the library that I was pretty sure I had heard
something about, but I didn’t know what.
Alex Craft knows how to kill someone. And she doesn’t feel
bad about it. When her older sister, Anna, was murdered three years ago and the
killer walked free, Alex uncaged the language she knows best. The language of
violence.
She relegates herself to the shadows, a girl who goes unseen in plain sight, unremarkable in the high school hallways.
But Jack Fisher sees her. So does Peekay.
Circumstances bring Alex, Jack, and Peekay together as their senior year unfolds. While partying one night, Alex’s darker nature breaks out, setting the teens on a collision course that will change their lives forever.
She relegates herself to the shadows, a girl who goes unseen in plain sight, unremarkable in the high school hallways.
But Jack Fisher sees her. So does Peekay.
Circumstances bring Alex, Jack, and Peekay together as their senior year unfolds. While partying one night, Alex’s darker nature breaks out, setting the teens on a collision course that will change their lives forever.
My five cent review:
OK. So we know at the beginning of the book
that Alex was deeply affected by the murder of her older sister with the
prologue basically serving as her confession. She has since separated herself
from people, in general, living her life in the shadows and avoiding people,
including her mother who brushes past her every now and then to refill her drink. Their little family has suffered more than one blow and
they are on the brink of implosion.
Then, Alex meets people and starts to have a
reason to try and act normal. She starts to think of alternatives to her chosen
isolation. She falls in love, not just with Jack and PeeKay but with the idea of possibility. The problem
is, the world is still filled with animals and Alex is one of few people
equipped to handle it. And now her emotional wall, having protected her inner
meat, has started to crumble.
Alex is an interesting character and might be
worth thinking about in terms of her response to trauma. Jack and PeeKay are
well developed supporting characters and are Alex’s connection to the world. They
are worth their own stories, though we don’t get to see too much of them before
the dramatic end of the story sends readers flailing with broken hearts and
full heads. Though, our just- world tendencies required this ending, didn’t it?
This book makes an excellent show of rape
culture as a context for girls and how they learn to interact with the world.
Even the “slut/ mean girl” gives us a moment of clarity about her motivations
and we realize that we are all a little lost in this world of violence and
non-justice.
Despite it's lack of "diversity," this book joins my 2016 Must Read list.
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