Crazy Love You
by Lisa Unger
This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app
1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date Feb 01 2015 | Archive Date Oct 31 2014
Simon & Schuster (Australia) | Simon & Schuster UK
Description
There has only ever been one constant in Ian's life: Priss. She is everything he isn't - powerful, enticing, beautiful. Dangerous. She isn't afraid to confront the problems that Ian isn't strong enough to face, but she also loves to feed his addictions for drugs, for sex, for running away. And no one seems to understand the volatile Priss the way Ian does.
But everything begins to change when Ian meets Megan - a kind, good-hearted woman who Ian wants to start a new life with. But Priss won't let Ian go so easily, not when she's spent a lifetime by his side. Priss is angry, and when she's angry, bad things begin to happen…
Available Editions
EDITION | Paperback |
ISBN | 9781471111488 |
PRICE | A$29.99 (AUD) |
Featured Reviews
Atmospheric, and intriguing. This book draws you in as you know something is not quite right, and Lisa unger knows how to successfully create a twist in the story.
Crazy Love You is my first Lisa Unger novel and I could not put this book down. It is an addictive psychological thriller. It will have you on the edge of your seat. I felt the full gambit of emotions, sorrow, empathy, heart racing and anxiety. Just when I thought I had it all figured out I read on to find I had it all wrong.
A love story that is dark enough to be addictive but not give you nightmares. It will have you double guessing the whole way through.
Crazy Love You is highly recommended. I will definitely be reading more Lisa Unger novels.
I've reviewed a few of Lisa Unger's novels here now and each time I mention that I'm a fan of her work and have pretty much read everything she's published.
As an aside, and before I continue... if you're *slightly* anal like moi and find yourself twitching at the fact the title of her latest novel, Crazy Love You, is grammatically frustrating, you can relax as it does make sense once you read the book. (It's named after the way our lead character Ian, describes his feelings. "I crazy love you," he tells Megan.)
It’s a case of life imitating art for Ian Paine. Or wait, should that be art imitating life?
Ian’s a successful graphic novelist with a series, Fatboy and Priss which is loosely based on his own life. Chubby as a child, 10 year old Ian was friendless until he met Priss. They became friends and Priss saw Ian through some rough times, including family tragedies.
Twenty years later Ian is a world away from his childhood home in The Hollows. His success has set him up in a trendy New York loft where he happily spends most of his time drunk or stoned and engaged in a casual on-again / off-again destructive relationship with Priss; the latter having the knack of appearing when Ian's at his most vulnerable.
Until one day he sees Megan. Megan’s sweet and earnest and Ian can’t help but fall in love with her. Despite knowing they'll incur Priss’s jealous rage.
And before he knows it Megan’s life has been put at risk and Ian’s own world is spiraling towards the point where redemption will be impossible.
Crazy Love You is another book which is hard to discuss at length without giving too much away.
Ian’s a frustrating lead because of his unhealthy co-dependence on Priss and constant self-sabotaging behaviour. You really want to slap him around the head a bit. (In the nicest possible way.)
I felt Megan occasionally came across as a bit too much of a princess at times (which I'm sure Unger's done on purpose - although it grated a tad), however the way in which she got sucked back into her relationship with Ian gave her character some substance.
Unger cleverly spins this tale so we don’t exactly know what’s happening. I’ve mentioned in recent reviews of Fleur Smithwick’s How to Make a Friend and SK Tremayne’s The Ice Twins, that there are some similarities between these three novels. And it’s bizarre I seem to find myself reading books with a similar undercurrent or theme.
Because I’m more of a straight suspense / thriller / crime fiction lover I didn’t appreciate the last quarter of the book as much as others most-certainly will. As in Tremayne's The Ice Twins, Unger takes this book to a different 'place' - one with which I struggle.
However, that aside, it’s one of those books which will keep you pondering for days (or sleepless nights) after you’ve turned the last page. Even now I find myself wondering exactly ‘who’ did ‘what’. Something which will make more sense once you’ve read the book – which you absolutely must do!
3.5-4 stars
Readers who liked this book also liked:
Publishers Lunch
General Fiction (Adult), Nonfiction (Adult), Teens & YA