Disappointing.

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I’m always here for a good thriller, I love a good mystery and I’m cool with the “boarding school” plot. This is set at a private high school in America, but the school feels like a British boarding school. Chiamaka has worked hard to get to the top of the class and is awarded head prefect as the beginning of senior year, as she expected. Devon is a kid who has tried to stay under the radar, he isn’t popular, he just tries to get by – but he is also awarded as a prefect for his senior year, much to his surprise.

Soon after, Chiamaka and Devon are being targeted and rumors are spread about them – both of them have skeletons in their closet that are suddenly being leaked to the entire student body via text messages from someone named “Aces.”

The beginning started out slow, setting up these characters, their friends and families, so I was willing to give this time – I’ve seen other reviews mention it gets better the second half of the story, so I kept listening.

Dear reader, it did not get better.

For a thriller, never once was I “on the edge of my seat” so to speak. I was never really invested in this plot line or these characters – they felt one dimensional and continued to make stupid decisions, say later how they made a poor decision, and make the same stupid decision the next time. Rinse and repeat. The plot line was predictable, and I’m terrible at guessing mysteries, so I feel that says a lot. This story had potential, but it fell flat.

Things this story did have going for it: 1. Chiamaka and Devon are both Black students at an all white private academy – they talk about the struggles of being Black and expectations of Black people compared to white students. 2. Chiamaka is biracial and speaks about how her own family is racist against her. 3. LGBTQ+ rep! It was there and it was proud – this book has homophobia in it, which isn’t nice, but felt like real life sadly. I thought it was portrayed well.

Overall, I wish I DNF-ed this earlier on. I thought it would get better, so I kept going, but I was left disappointed with an unsatisfying conclusion.