Genre: Psychological
Thriller/Fiction
Date of Publication: February
7, 2012
Memorable Quotation: “I
feel like I ought to ask more questions, ought to show more interest, but there
is little point. Anything he tells me now
I will have forgotten by the time I wake tomorrow. Today is all I have.”
(pg.30)
Lasting Impression: An electrifying novel of an amnesiac who
plays both the detective and the victim as she tries to discover her memories and
the secrets they hide about her past.
Storyline: A
Pace of Story: A+
Characters: A
Ending: A+
Overall Grade: A+
Memories: they define us. Who are we
without our memories? Who can we grow to be without remembering our experiences
to learn from? For most, these questions
cannot be answered because not until we become elderly do we have to worry
about them. For forty-seven year old
Christine Lucas, however, she wakes up every morning not remembering anything;
rebuilding them throughout the day only to have them erased as she
sleeps.
The cause of her rare kind of
amnesia is due to by a terrible incident that happened twenty years before. To help her find her memories that she
believes are still in her mind but have been suppressed, she takes her
psychologist’s recommendation to write about her daily events in order to
remember what had occurred and hopefully something would stay in her memory for
more than a few hours. Before we begin
our journey through Christine’s written memories, we are confronted with three
words that immediately give the readers a jaded view of Christine’s husband:
DON’T TRUST BEN. As we begin to read and
understand Christine, the reader must ask: Are these three simple words just a
way to mess with the reader’s sense of who to trust, as Christine would feel, or
is this really a beacon of light that will help us see through the darkness
that falsities have brought into Christine’s world and mind?
The story itself is incredible,
and the amount of detail Watson puts into Before
I Go to Sleep makes it hard to believe this is actually his debut. From the first page, I was immediately sucked
into the story and had a difficult time putting it down. Watson has a wonderful way with words,
arranging them to create emotion and sound in ways visual aid would normally be
needed to express. Christine’s journal
is also broken up well, with interruptions to the flow and breaks that make it
sound more realistic. (I wish he would
have used a different font for the journal entries but that is only a minor criticism.)
What really made this novel stand
out more than any psychological thriller I have ever read was the amount of
twists Watson was able to incorporate into the storyline and not lose the
reader in the chaos that he creates. Not
only does he do well keeping the reader’s attention with the twists to the
story but more importantly, he has Christine roll with the punches her memory
brings her as it slowly returns and the missing pieces of her life finally
reappear, and the epiphanies they bring will continuously blow the reader’s
mind.
For such an intense novel, there
had to be a powerful ending to conclude it properly, and Watson does not
disappoint. The ending is exceptional,
tying everything together with a neat bow.
After everything is said and done, you may find yourself almost exhausted
and with a slight headache from everything that had happened, but it will be
worth the journey. Before I Go To Sleep left
me with chills, even a day after I had finished it, and has left a chilling
question stuck in my head: If you can’t trust your memories, who can you trust?
~Shelly-Beans
1 comment:
I really want to read this book! I will have to one day ask to borrow it from you.
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