Member Reviews

Holy cow this was a creepy book. I loved it!! Very well written and kept me interested. I felt bad for Ivy when Iris was obviously very manipulative and trying to take her life over.

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OMG, very suspenseful! Once I started reading, I couldn't stop. The build-up in this book is amazing. The ending isn't how I wanted it all to pan out, but it definitely makes the book more intense. I would love it if a sequel happened (hint, hint, Natasha Preston).

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Very good read but disappointing ending. Left me feeling disjointed about the book, but I did enjoy the rest of it.

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This story is addicting and thrilling. I did not want to stop reading it. This was a bit slow, but I'm a huge fan of slow burn books. This has just the right amount of creep factor to make me order pizza for the family, so I could finish. Brava to this author, she nailed it

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Wow, Natasha Preston knocked this one of the park!!! The Twin is a fast paced thriller you won't be able to put down.

After a tragic accident that resulted in their mother's death, teenager twin girls are reunited. The twins lived separate for the past six years after their parents divorce. Although identical twins, Iris and Ivy have very different personalities. Ivy starts to question if she really knows her twin as her life spirals out of control.

The Twin is hands down one of the best psychological thrillers I have read lately. This is my first book by Preston and will certainty not be my last. She does an excellent job creating the characters so you feel like you know them.

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I really did not like this book- it is not advertised as a young adult novel, but it certainly reads like one. The actions, dialogue, and characters' thoughts throughout the book are very shallow and immature. It centers on Ivy, a junior in high school whose mom passes away in an accident, causing her somewhat estranged sister Iris, who lived with their mother, to come live with Ivy and her dad. As soon as Iris gets there, bad things start happening to Ivy and she questions where Iris's allegiances lie, as well as what really happened to their mother.

This was a pretty predictable, though at times dark, storyline, with Ivy trying to tell people that Iris is setting her up and nobody believers her. Why she never seeks to get proof of what is going on (I kept waiting for her to record conversations on her phone), I do not understand. I also couldn't understand what Ivy and Iris's relationship was like before this happened- the book said they chose to live with different parents because that is who they were closest to, but never gave any indication that there was a deep problem between the 2. Furthermore, the ending doesn't really resolve anything and was not satisfying to me.

I found a couple minor discrepancies in the book- such as one where Ivy repeatedly mentions that Iris has hair "down to her butt" and that Ivy's own hair is 4 inches shorter, but later says that Iris cut her hair right below her shoulder blades, which is "just like [Ivy's]", though that is a difference of much more than 4 inches.

Overall, I might recommend this book for young teens who like the genre- I imagine those who read Sara Shepard books might enjoy.

Thanks to Netgalley for providing me a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

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Ivy and Iris are twins, separated at age 12 when their parents divorced. A few years later, their mother is dead and Iris joins Ivy in living with their father. Ivy worries about her sister, then realizes her sister seems to be trying to take over HER life. Her friends, her classes, her boyfriend, and even her dad. Ivy tries to connect with Iris's old friends and no one will talk with her, until Kat.

Kat meets Ivy and tells her to be careful of Iris. Soon after, Kat is dead. Ivy tries to convince her father, her teachers and counselors that Iris is the problem, not Ivy. Read the book to learn if Ivy is successful in fending off her sister.

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Thank you NetGalley and Delacorte Press and Elelweiss for the ARC in exchange for my honest review!

This is the 2nd book I've read by Natasha Preston and I enjoyed it for what it is. Its a young adult book and although I'm much older than the target audience, I truly like her books.

The Twin is about two twin sisters whose parents divorced. Iris goes to live with her mother and Ivy lives with her dad. After the death of their mother, Iris comes to live with her sister and her father.

There were a few things that irked me. I didn't really understand why the parents split the girls up, but maybe that was just one of those things that don't make sense and never will. The book also at times reminded me almost of John Saul's Second Child..

However, I love Preston's way of sucking you in. She presented the story in a creepy but not overly creepy way. It was just enough to give your goosebumps but not make it over the top.

Iris becomes a little crazy, or maybe she always was. She is obessesed with taking over her twins life, right down to the clothes she wears. Its a fast paced book and the ending is great!

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The Twin by Natasha Preston is a young adult psychological thriller about two twins, Ivy and Iris who are separated at the age of ten when their parents divorce. Ivy lives with her dad and Iris lives with her mom. They don’t have the twin bond that I so often hear about but because of the twins each visiting the other parent on off weekends and holidays/breaks, their sisterly bond isn’t strong.

"Somewhere over time and our parents' separation, our silly dreams died, and we stopped sharing any new ones. 'Do you want to talk, Iris? Her haunted eyes look right through me. "I want so much more than that."

When the twins mother dies in a tragic accident, Iris comes to live with Ivy and her dad. This is when Ivy’s life begins to fall apart.
Strange things start to happen to Ivy, things to discredit her and get her in trouble with her friends, her dad and at school but who’s causing all the trouble? Is Ivy losing her mind or is Iris trying to take over her life?
The Twin is darkly atmospheric and well-written, creepy and compelling. Although it was a tiny bit predictable, I still found it highly entertaining.

A big thank you to NetGalley, Random House Children’s, Delacorte Press, and Natasha Preston for providing me with a copy of The Twin in exchange for my honest review.

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I find this book extremely unbelievable. Some parts were good, but i ended up skimming for the most part. Just don't see how anyone would really believe these events.

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***Thanks to NetGalley for providing me a complimentary copy of THE TWIN by Natasha Preston in exchange for my honest review.***

At age ten, identical twins Iris and Ivy’s parents divorce, Iris moves with her mother, Ivy stays with her father. Now their mother is dead from fall while jogging and Iris is back with her sister and dad. Soon Ivy suspects Iris is gaslighting her.

I’m a sucker for books about twins, especially dark thrillers like THE TWIN. Natasha Preston can always be counted on to write my kind of story.

Narrator Ivy is supposed to be the “good twin”, kind and responsible, welcoming to her sister. I was glad to see her father offered therapy and Ivy embracing the opportunity to work on her grief with a professional. Ivy sees Iris as cold and unfriendly, lacking insight and soon much worse. Early on, I decided to take Iris’s “side”. I didn’t like Ivy’s subtle superiority or judgments, even though they seemed to be accurate. I choose to see Ivy as the sinister one feigning innocence to frame her twin. When Ivy sought evidence, I saw her creating “proof”. I assume writers don’t care whether readers take creative license with interpretation, as long as we’re enjoying their novels and recommending them.

My only pet peeve was with Meera, the therapist psychoanalyzing Iris based on Ivy’s reporting. A good therapist knows that a client’s report about a person of conflict, particularly a teen talking about a sibling, is filtered through bias and not a literal report. Good therapists refrain from making statements about the character of others and instead focus on the client’s feelings.

THE TWIN is a very satisfying read and left me wanting a sequel. It would make a great TV movie or miniseries (hello LifetimeTV, are you listening?).

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The Twin by Natasha Preston
Publish date 3/3/2020
Read courtesy of NetGalley.net

Ms. Preston is way lucky the ending was worth the wait, because I almost never got there. About one-third through the story, I was ready to make this a DNF. It felt repetitive and formulaic. Been-there-done-that-check list: Evil twin ✔️, clueless adults ✔️, fickle friends ✔️... But I decided to stick with it to see what's it was about this story that was worth publishing it. I'm glad I did.

However, I'm not sure how I'm going to convince my high schoolers to keep reading past the commonplace plot other than to put a big "Wait for it...!" sign on the cover.

Some real positives, however, are that there were a lot of truisms in the story without being preachy. It didn't become a self-help book for someone who has lost a parent. I also feel like Ms. Preston did her best to make this a psychological thriller and not about mental health.

I'll get this for my high school library and wait to see what happens...

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E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus



Ivy has lived with her father ever since her parents divorced, but her twin sister Iris has lived with their mother. When their mother dies while running (she falls on a slippery bridge), Iris must come lives with Ivy. Both are grieving, although Iris is dry eyed. She also has to start a new high school, so things are awkward and tense. Ivy has a boyfriend, and is doing well, but things start to fall apart when Iris arrives. A dead mouse ends up in Ivy's swim locker, and it doesn't make her happy when Iris also decides to join the swim team. Iris is oddly threatening at home as well, always making the comments so the father doesn't hear them. For a long time, it's just the creepy feeling that Iris isn't quite right, but after Ivy contacts Iris' friends at her old school, she starts to worry that perhaps Iris killed their mother. Will Iris continue to gaslight Ivy until she is able to have their father all to herself?

Strengths: I was impressed by the writing on this one. Each chapter ended in a sort of disconcertingly creepy way, even though Iris doesn't actually DO a whole lot. I even wondered if it was Ivy creating everything in her own mind, and if Iris was actually okay, so this was rather brilliant. I have a few students who appreciate psychological horror, and this had an April Henry sort of feel to it. A fast, compelling read, with swimming as well. (I have two students who are devouring the few swimming books I have, and this is ideal for one of them.)

Weaknesses: This is definitely YA in its pacing (a bit slow), and there is one scene where Iris tries to convince their father that Ivy was going to have sex. Other than the phrase "have sex", there's nothing problematic for middle schoolers.

What I really think: Definitely purchasing. The cover may make this one I have to hand sell, but it is perfect for fans of Corrigan's The Accomplice or Creep or Ventrella's Black Flowers, White Lies.

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This book was received as an ARC from Random House Children's - Delacorte Press in exchange for an honest review. Opinions and thoughts expressed in this review are completely my own.

I am a fan of Natasha Preston and of The Cellar in how breathtakingly thrilling the story was and I had the same expectations of The Twin. I was shockingly surprised on how addicting and thrilling the story was of Ivy and Iris and how they lost their mom to a tragic accident and Iris moves in with Ivy and her dad with nobody she can trust...except Ivy. Then Iris "steals" Ivy's life and Ivy now is paranoid to the fullest and their relationship is now at risk and even more than that. I could not stop reading, I had to know all of what happened between Iris and Ivy and how they wanted nothing but to be reunited whatever the cost even if it means sacrificing the ones they love to be with each other. A dashing/thrilling novel that is sure to leave you breathless.

We will consider adding this title to our YFiction collection at our library. That is why we give this book 5 stars.

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I received a free digital arc from netgally in return for my 100% honest opinion.


First and for most I am a huge fan of Natasha Preston and was super excited when she announced she was writing another book and even more excited when I saw the cover and title. What really intrigued me about this book was that I am an identical twin and how Natasha played on the good twin bad twin stigma.

Ivy and Iris are twins and when there parents divorce Ivy lives with dad and Iris lives with mom, with each of them switching and staying at the other parents house during school breaks. One day mom dies from a horrible accident and Iris moves in with dad and Ivy, twins should always be together, they will be the one to never fault you right?

So what happens when one twin wants to be just like the other? Iris starts asking Ivy questions about her friends, school, grades, her swim team, her boyfriend and things she likes, could be just iris getting to know her twin sister better after all to have a better home life or could be something sinister.

Iris won’t speak about her moms death and Ivy starts seeing a therapist so she can have someone to talk to about her moms death and all the changes that are happening to her now. Iris starts to manipulate Ivys closes friends, send a photo to her boyfriend of ivy kissing another guy at a party, keeping friends away from Ivy, getting Ivy in trouble, setting ivy up to get kicked out of school, doing things a sister who wants to be with her sister wouldn’t do.

Iris wants to be Ivy, but you can’t have two Ivy(s) unfortunately, so who goes and who stays. The good twin or the evil twin? I was expecting Ivy to win but with Iris being the mastermind that she is, she was always ahead of Ivy, even when Ivy thought she was just a step ahead of Iris, she really never was. Iris was so good at fooling everyone and making everyone believe that Ivy wasn’t dealing with there moms death and with Iris moving into the house with her and dad that everyone believed that Ivy was jealous and crazy, just how Iris wanted.

In the end Ivy confronts Iris starts home about everything and Iris confesses to absolutely everything but Ivy failed to record any of it, so you can only imagine what there dad did when he got home and had to pull Ivy off of Iris to break up the fight they were in. Ivy was sent to a mental institution where she wanted to contact with her sister Iris, but would gladly speak to the only person her hasn’t betrayed her yet, her therapist, until she finds out that Iris was in the institution to see Ivy by said therapist.

Ivy has been betrayed by everyone, and she was officially alone, but the worst part is that Iris had won, and had succeeded in removing Ivy and became the new and improved Ivy.

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