Good Me Bad Me by Ali Land 
Flatiron Books: 9/5/17
    eBook review copy; 304 pages
    ISBN-13: 9781250087645 
Good Me Bad Me by Ali Land is a very highly recommended psychological thriller. This is an impressive, compelling debut novel.
"Milly’s mother is a serial killer. Though Milly loves her mother,
    the only way to make her stop is to turn her in to the police. Milly
    is given a fresh start: a new identity, a home with an affluent
    foster family and a spot at an exclusive private school." 
Psychologist Mike Newmont, his wife, Saskia, and their daughter, Phoebe 
take Milly (whose real name is Annie) into their home, while her mother,
 Ruth, a nurse who
    murdered nine young children, is locked up and headed toward a 
trial.
Mike's job is to provide Milly with therapy and support as she comes to 
terms with her childhood and prepares for testifying at her mother's 
trial, but after living with her mother and being abused for fifteen 
years, Milly knows how to keep some things secret. She knows what her 
mother would say, what she is capable of, and she still hears her 
mother's voice in her head. Milly certainly sees and knows more than she
 tells Mike, as well as other people.
As Milly is trying hard to fit in at her new home, she is also 
struggling to fit in at her new school too, even as Phoebe, also 
fifteen, is determined to bully her and make her life hell. The problem 
is that Phoebe doesn't know Milly's true identity - and that Milly knows
 all about bullies and tormentors. Can Milly be good, or is she her 
mother's daughter?  
Good Me Bad Me really is an unputdownable novel. Land manages to 
capture a feeling of impending dread that had me hooked from the 
beginning. The tension didn't let up straight through to the end. The 
narrative is wonderfully paced to allow that feeling of nervous 
anticipation of some unnamed horrific event that will surely be 
forthcoming. Milly's account of events also has her  gradually 
disclosing more information about her past. As the tormenting increases,
 the potential of what living with Ruth has taught Milly, also begins to
 surface.
It is also a character analysis of someone who has experienced years of 
 horrific childhood trauma. The abuse is by the hands of someone who is 
supposed to love her, establishing the question is it nature or nurture.
 Can Milly overcome the experiences of her childhood or is she doomed to
 repeat what her mother has taught her? 
Adding to the total package is the excellent writing. Land presents us 
with a well-written, entertaining, engrossing psychological thriller 
that held my rapt attention from beginning to end.
Disclosure:
        My review copy was courtesy of Flatiron Books. 

2 comments:
How disturbing/gory is this? I am so so so intrigued by the premise but a total wuss about gore!
Not really gory, but there are disturbing things. It is definitely more of a psychological thriller.
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