*NOTE: this review contains spoilers for book 1 of the series.*
Pros: interesting concept, explores mental trauma
Cons: some gross descriptions
Picking up immediately where The Murders of Molly Southbourne left off, the molly who survives the fire tries to find out who she is, and how she can live, a copy of the original. The memories and ghosts of Molly Prime and all the doppelgangers the prime killed, bring the surviving molly to the brink of madness. When a new enemy points to more answers about her origins she discovers there may be a better way of surviving.
A lot of time is spent in molly’s head, reliving her traumas and trying to overcome what her prime did. This causes her several psychotic breaks, which involve time in a mental hospital. I appreciated that molly realized her condition would probably require anti-psychotic medication for her to manage it properly. Some of the scenes involved may be disturbing to certain readers though.
Whenever I started to get annoyed with how molly was acting the story shifted gears and something new forced her to change. I liked seeing her develop over time, learning as she went and becoming an individual rather than an extension of Molly Prime.
Having said that, this is a horror novella, and there are several scenes of violence and descriptions of bodily fluids.
It touches on more of the mystery surrounding Molly’s origins, which was great. It was very interesting meeting another person with the same ‘condition’.
It’s a quick, interesting read.
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