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'Kepnes gleefully portrays the most back-stabbing seminar yet, dropping literary names with abandon as she twists the plot . . . Joe Goldberg might be a narcissistic, manipulative, murderous, utterly unreliable narrator, but he's damn entertaining' -- Kirkus Review (starred review)
'Within this intensity, [Joe's] snark-laden observations about ego, love, and loyalty ring true' -- Booklist
'Hypnotic and scary . . . totally original' -- Stephen King
'I will read anything she writes. . . . One of the smartest, most insightful writers out there' -- Nicola Yoon
'Delicious . . . It's Kepnes' wit and style that keep you coming back' -- Lena Dunham
'That peerless author who makes me laugh and glance over my shoulder on the very same page' -- Jessica Knoll
'I absolutely loved it. It's completely addictive, razor-sharp writing from Kepnes. Internet creeping at its most darkly humorous. Joe's back, and this time it's definitely real love' -- Catherine Steadman
'As irresistible and as blisteringly acid as ever. Horrible and glorious' -- Catriona Ward
'Magnificent' -- Guardian
'Joe Goldberg has become a cultural mainstay. . . . Kepnes has mastered the likable villain' -- Rolling Stone
'Everyone's favorite stalker' -- Entertainment Weekly
'Chilling . . . dangerously clever' -- USA Today
'Beautifully crafted . . . will give you chills' -- People
'Caroline Kepnes must be some kind of storytelling sorcerer. How else can Joe Goldberg - stalker, creep, multiple-murderer, blamer of everyone else but himself, a "long overdue book, the one you never thought was coming" - be such an entertaining narrator? Even Tom Ripley, Patricia Highsmith's famously amoral character (a clear inspiration for Kepnes), could be enjoyed at a third-person remove, unlike the in-your-face immediacy of Joe's blinkered perspective. . . brilliant' -- The New York Times Book Review
'Kepnes waggishly satirizes the publishing industry, and her outsized characters' egos and anxieties lay the foundations for delightfully deranged plot twists . . . Joe's stream-of-consciousness narration engages throughout, rendering readers both confidante and accomplice. Kepnes reliably entertains' -- Publishers Weekly