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The Boy Meets Girl Massacre (Annotated), by Ainslie Hogarth
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Gripping, grisly, and keeps you guessing until the shocking end Noelle Dixon takes a summer nightshift job at the infamous Boy Meets Girl Inn, even though shes well aware of the horrifying murders that happened there decades ago. Thats why she has a diaryto write down everything she experiences in case things go bump in the night. But the inexplicable freezing drafts, the migrating rotten-flesh smell, and the misplaced personal items dont really scare her. Noelle has bigger problems: her fathers failing health, her friend Alfreds inappropriate crush, and the sore spot on the back of her head that keeps getting worse. When a party commemorating the anniversary of the original killings ends in a ghoulish bloodbath, Noelles diary becomes the key piece of evidence for investigators. But the cryptic entries suggest that theres more to the bizarre case than can be rationally explained . . . Praise: ""Grim, gross, and smart, this title will satisfy hard-core horror fans.""School Library Journal ""Highly frightening and effective.""Kirkus Reviews This strange, incredibly grisly story will likely thrill teenagers and horrify their parents.Foreword Reviews Hogarth delivers in bringinga summer slasher flick to the page.Publishers Weekly
- Sales Rank: #1525595 in Books
- Published on: 2015-09-08
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 7.97" h x .38" w x 5.32" l, .60 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 288 pages
About the Author
Ainslie Hogarth (Toronto, Canada) has an undergraduate degree in English Literature and Philosophy and a Masters in Creative Writing. She watches a lot of movies and has a lot more books in her head.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Spine tingling and creepy, gruesome diary entries written in the ultimate horror setting; a haunted inn.
By Dark Faerie Tales
Review courtesy of Dark Faerie Tales
Quick & Dirty: Spine tingling and creepy, gruesome diary entries written in the ultimate horror setting; a haunted inn.
Opening Sentence: Dear Detective Umbridge, I first met Trevor Donald at a coffee shop a few months ago.
The Review:
What the…?! Seriously, this is why I avoid horror books, they freak the daylights out of me. The story is told in diary entries, annotated by a detective and a script writer and supplemented with letters connected to the story. An interesting way to tell it, for sure, and if you did manage to lose interest, the creepy diary entries would wake you up in an instant!
Waking Noelle comes across as a severely angry /troubled teenager with almost schizophrenic behaviour. One minute she’s annoyed with her dad, then she wants to kill him, then wishes she was never born. Her anger progresses into a twisted disturbing story that ends in her gorging the skin off her head. Disgusting. If I ever felt sorry for the girl, I was immediately sickened by her yucky habit of picking her head until it bleeds. To make it worse, she describes it in such vivid detail in her diary, making it sound like she really enjoys this habit of hers; it bordered on obsession!
Sleeping Noelle is a different creature altogether. It’s so scary to think that she could have been responsible for hurting those cats, and that a different version of her writes in the diary when she’s asleep. That loss of control would be terrifying, especially since she doesn’t recall anything in the morning and can only rely on what she wrote (and the blood on her hands).
You just want me to feel bad. You had me write that stuff down so you could judge me. So I could judge me. Quit building a judge into my brain, I don’t want it. I don’t wanna judge myself this way.
This is why little girls have diaries. Diaries are worst enemies disguised as best friends. You make us write in you, you make us tell you everything, then you TURN ON US.
I’m sorry. It’s not you.
I wonder what happened to Alf, because presumably everyone in the inn that night was murdered so Alf must have died too… but wasn’t Alf sleeping upstairs and the ‘thing’ that kills them all made its way from downstairs, right, leaving Noelle as the last victim? Well, that’s the version according to her diary and who knows how much truth and reality that contains?
For whatever reason Olivia didn’t have any eyebrows. Based on two overly active mounds of flesh above her eyes, she guessed where her eyebrows should be and drew new ones on each morning. Because of this Alf found it very difficult to speak with her face to face. He couldn’t tell if she was mad or sad or happy and he found it unsettling.
I didn’t want to like this book at all. It’s a freaky horror story; not my preferred kind of read! Despite all that, the fact that I couldn’t stop reading, or that I was literally screaming at the kids (in my head) not to bring out the Ouija board, or go to the basement shows how addictive the story really is. The Boy Meets Girl Massacre is a creepy read, perfect for fans of gory details.
Notable Scene:
Birth and death are always sure, each in fact, as sure as the other. So how is birth a miracle? Miracles are supposed to be rare, extraordinary. Not something that happens every day.
And if birth is such a miracle, why is death a tragedy?
FTC Advisory: Flux provided me with a copy of The Boy Meets Girl Massacre. No goody bags, sponsorships, “material connections,” or bribes were exchanged for my review.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Creepy, disgusting and thrilling at the same time
By Majanka
After reading and reviewing The Lonely by Ainslie Hogarth, which I thought was an amazing read, I just had to read her second book. The books aren’t related, nor are they part of the same series, but they do have some of the same qualities. Both books have a magical surrealism theme going on, making the reader question what is real and what is just in the character’s minds. I love those types of books, so naturally, I loved this one too.
The book starts out rather cryptic. Noelle and her best friend Alf take on summer nightshift jobs at the infamous Boy Meets Girl Inn – a place where several decades ago, some grisly murders happened. Murders that included the perp eating people. Yep, they’re that horrific. So Noelle and Alf go to the inn hoping to find signs of a haunting, and of course, to invite all their friends (and the kids from school they just want to impress) to the Anniversary – of the murder, of course. Or of the last murder to be precise. But while some strange things happen, like the bathroom light turning on all by itself, Noelle doesn’t really get scared. She has al ot more to worry about – for instance, the diary she started, and that now seems to have a life of its own. Then there’s her Dad’s illness, which makes it almost impossible for him to go out or take care of himself, and leaves her in the tough position of having to be his personal nurse twenty-four/seven. Then there’s also the sore spot on the back of her head. She’s been touching it for years, sometimes even scratching it, but the last few weeks, the pain has been getting worse, and going into patterned space (which usually helps) doesn’t do the trick anymore….
The book has an unique format. We start out with an introduction to the case – apparently the bodies of Noelle and some of her friends were found after a massacre at the inn, and Noelle’s diary is the only piece of evidence that might explain what happened. A film maker bought the diary from a retired detective, in an effort to turn it into a movie. Then we get Noelle’s diary, and from then on, apart from some annotations (like the title suggests), it’s Noelle doing the talking.
I loved the unique format, and I think that, along with the author’s unique writing style, is what worked for me the most. The story isn’t all that original – a haunted inn, a murder/massacre – but the author adds so many cool and fun elements that it reads unlike anything I’ve read before, making it unique. We get the sore spot on Noelle’s head, and wonder what the connection is. Is Noelle seeing ghosts, or is she going crazy? Then in her diary, Noelle says some pretty intense stuff, and again, the reader is left to wonder. The book has a high level of gore though, but for me, I didn’t really mind, if anything, it made Noelle appear more realistic that she talked about gory stuff too.
If you don’t mind books that’ll have you scratching your head (hopefully not on a sore spot, like Noelle) and leave you baffled at the end, and have a high creep factor and some gore, then you should absolutely, definitely, no doubt in my mind, read The Boy Meets Girl Massacre (Annotated). It’s amazing.
I received a free copy in exchange for an honest review.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
THIS BOOK IS CREEEEEPTASTIC!!!!
By quibecca
Let me start by saying this book should not be read on the Kindle. In my opinion. With all the annotations I think it kind of took away from the book having to follow it on the Kindle. I think it would have been far scarier reading it while it happened in a "real" book. BUT, having said that, this book is CREEPTASTIC. it's definitely for older readers, in my opinion. It has a lot of language, and it's very creepy, and graphic in some places. It was so good. SO Creepy!
Noelle and her friend Alf work at Boy Meets Girl Inn, where things go bump in the night. I mean, really go bump. While things are going on Noelle has her diary going so she can remember the things that happen while she is on her night shift at the inn.
She and her friend Alf have some very interesting nights at the hotel. They want to host a party on the night of the anniversary of some "real" killing that happened there. Who does that? I think the scariest think I did as a teenager was play "ghost in the graveyard" in the actual graveyard. I thought that was scary. Having a party in an inn where some very horrible, ghoulish murders had actually happened would probably be more than I could handle.
Noelle, has a lot of things going on in her life. We find that out during her writings in her diary. I think the diary is creepier than what is actually happening in the book.
I ended up finishing this book in the day because I had to quit reading it before bed. I love scary books, just like I love scary movies, but this one really creeped me out at times. I would make my daughter make sure the doors were locked...hehe! Seriously this was such a great, scary book.
I do not like all the language in the book, but in all honesty I was totally involved in every aspect of this book that the language only bothered me sometimes. I just want people to be aware that it is there.
I cannot even really tell you much about it without giving something away. It's the little things that make the whole book what it is. Exciting, scary, interesting, page turning awesomeness!
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