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The Female of the Species, by Mindy McGinnis
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2017 Tayshas List Selection * YALSA Top 10 Best YA Fiction of 2017 * School Libray Journal Best of 2016 * Junior Library Guild Selection * The Globe and Mail Best Books of 2016 * Bustle’s Best Young Adult Books of 2016 * Mashable’s 8 Best YA Books of 2016 * Seventeen's 10 Best YA Books of 2016 * CCBC Choices 2017
Edgar Award-winning author Mindy McGinnis delivers a relentless and riveting contemporary YA novel that examines rape culture through alternating perspectives. A stunning, unforgettable page-turner.
Alex Craft knows how to kill someone. And she doesn’t feel bad about it.
Three years ago, when her older sister, Anna, was murdered and the killer walked free, Alex uncaged the language she knows best—the language of violence. While her own crime goes unpunished, Alex knows she can’t be trusted among other people. Not with Jack, the star athlete who wants to really know her but still feels guilty over the role he played the night Anna’s body was discovered. And not with Peekay, the preacher’s kid with a defiant streak who befriends Alex while they volunteer at an animal shelter. Not anyone.
As their senior year unfolds, Alex’s darker nature breaks out, setting these three teens on a collision course that will change their lives forever.
- Sales Rank: #42423 in Books
- Brand: Katherine Tegen Books
- Published on: 2016-09-20
- Released on: 2016-09-20
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 8.25" h x 1.13" w x 5.50" l, 1.42 pounds
- Binding: Hardcover
- 352 pages
Features
From School Library Journal
Gr 10 Up—After her sister was brutally murdered, Alex Craft sought revenge when her killer walked free. Alex cuts herself off from everyone in her small backwoods town, until Peekay, the shy preacher's kid, and Jack Fisher, the most popular guy in school, force their way into her life as friends, with unintended consequences for all of them. An unsettling and stark exploration of small-town life and the secrets that we all keep.
Review
★ “Each word has been specifically chosen, each character superbly and humanly sculpted, the plot line masterfully completed. To say more would be to dilute the experience. McGinnis plays with the readers and they are at her mercy.” (Voice of Youth Advocates (VOYA) (starred review))
★ “Whether a catcall, an unwelcome touch, or more, sexual aggression towards females happens daily; McGinnis explores how one teen uses violence for justice in this gripping story that should be read and discussed by teens, as well as those who work with them.” (Booklist (starred review))
★ “McGinnis gracefully avoids the pitfalls of creating a teenage vigilante, instead maintaining a sense of piercing realism. Alex is a pained girl in dangerous free fall, whose fierce independence is challenged by newfound friendships, even love, though neither may be enough to stave off the inevitable.” (Publishers Weekly (starred review))
★ “All three teens are haunted by the memory of Anna’s murder, and Alex’s inclination to both considering and exacting revenge with cruel efficiency leads them all inexorably to an explosive, terrible finale. An unflinching look at rape culture and its repercussions.” (Kirkus Reviews (starred review))
★ “An astoundingly dark but beautifully written tragedy, brimming with sexual assault, violent murders, and accounts of animal abuse...but also tempered with glimpses of genuine human emotion and extremely touching displays of kindness that cross social barriers and species. Highly recommended for collections serving teenagers.” (School Library Journal (starred review))
“It’s raw. Not ‘raw for YA.’ Real-deal raw. And violent. And unforgettable. McGinnis explores both and she goes there in a way no one really has before in YA. This is Kill Bill in high school, but with more nuance, bolder choices and a true female perspective.” (The Globe and Mail)
“Your heart may still be pounding after you’ve finished this book. It is uncannily well timed to our current political situation...McGinnis, who dedicates her book to ‘the victims,’ examines this dichotomy of hope and violence, love and hate, with dexterity and grace.” (The New York Times Book Review)
“The ending of this dark novel leaves much to be unpacked, and it would certainly spark heated discussion in a book club or classroom.” (Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books)
“Holy crap is it good.” (Bustle)
McGinnis’s novel about a teenage girl who avenges her sister’s rape and murder and becomes a self-created human weapon is a gut punch that will leave you reassessing everything you thought you knew about the lives of young women.” (NY Mag)
A Must-Read YA Book of Fall 2016 (Brightly.com)
From the Back Cover
Alex Craft knows how to kill someone. And she doesn’t feel bad about it. When her older sister, Anna, was murdered three years ago and the killer walked free, Alex uncaged the language she knows best. The language of violence.
While her crime goes unpunished, Alex knows she can’t be trusted among other people, even in her small hometown. She relegates herself to the shadows, a girl who goes unseen in plain sight, unremarkable in the high school hallways.
But Jack Fisher sees her. He’s the guy all other guys want to be: the star athlete gunning for valedictorian with the prom queen on his arm. Guilt over the role he played the night Anna’s body was discovered hasn’t let him forget Alex, and now her green eyes amid a constellation of freckles have his attention. He doesn’t want to only see Alex Craft; he wants to know her.
So does Peekay, the preacher’s kid, a girl whose identity is entangled with her dad’s job, though that does not stop her from knowing the taste of beer or missing the touch of her ex-boyfriend. When Peekay and Alex start working together at the animal shelter, a friendship forms and Alex’s protective nature extends to more than just the dogs and cats they care for.
Circumstances bring Alex, Jack, and Peekay together as their senior year unfolds. While partying one night, Alex’s darker side breaks out, setting the teens on a collision course that will change their lives forever. Edgar Award—winning author Mindy McGinnis artfully crafts three alternating perspectives into a dark and riveting exploration of what it means to be the female of the species.
Most helpful customer reviews
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful.
5-stars
By Ang
Sometimes I read a book that stays with me for a long time afterwards. The Female of the Species by Mindy McGinnis did just that. It’s dark and dangerous with a subtle element of suspense throughout, and I was reading it so fast because I had to know what happened.
There are three povs in this novel and each one has a distinct voice, but the real star of the show is Alex. After her sister’s vicious murder, she’s on a quest for vengeance and wants to obliterate any sexual predator in her wake. Sounds like a pretty sweet idea, right? Who wouldn’t want to make sexual predators pay? Alex reminded me a bit of Dexter if you’ve seen the TV show. Dexter had what he called a dark passenger that compelled him to kill. Does Alex have a dark passenger? Is her compulsion to kill solely a result of her sister’s murder? Or is it something that’s always been inside of her? This was an interesting theme throughout.
Alex is isolated and a loner until she befriends Peekay and Jack. Once she starts to develop feelings for her friends things get complicated. Really complicated. What happens when her new friendships make her rethink her need for vengeance? How will this all culminate?
The author does a phenomenal job of capturing high school characters and their fears and hopes and jealousies along with their capacity for love and forgiveness. This story made me remember all those confusing emotions that come with teenagers years.
All in all this is one terrific, twisted tale, and I am thrilled to have read it. I look forward to reading Ms. McGinnis’ backlog. Go 1-click this book if you want to get immersed in an epic page turner!
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
A Dark, Powerful, Emotional Book that Everyone Needs to Read
By Austine @ NovelKnight
I've always found my best reviews tend to be the ones written while still in the emotional thrall of a book. For a book like The Female of the Species, I think this is especially important.
Before I go on, I want to mention that this book contains a lot of commentary on rape and rape culture, as well as scenes with vividly written animal cruelty and violence. While it's made clear that these topics are beyond horrible, the scenes may cause emotional distress for those who find them triggering.
The Female of the Species is pure wreckage on the mind. It's not a book with a straightforward plot. Character A does this to get this, but something happens that they have to overcome. Instead, it is the story of Alex Craft, a girl who is strong yet broken with a moral compass firmly pressed to one side, someone with no room for the dark things in the world. Though there are 3 characters who share their points-of-view, this is not their story.
I'm honestly struggling to find the words to describe this book and I know that the longer I wait the worse that will get so bear with me here.
Alex. Alex freaking Craft. This girl, y'all, let me tell you. I loved her with all of her little quirks. She had so much happen to her, from an absent father to a mother who barely tolerated her, and then her sister, the crux of it all. Her sister who was used and murdered and left in the woods. And this girl? She decided to do something about it that no one else would.
Of the three characters (Alex, Peekay, and Jack), she was the one I loved most. This is your precious cinnamon bun, for those who like to describe characters as such. She takes the extremist side against rape and lashes out in the most violent of ways. But not only that, through Alex, we see what our culture has become like. How people are afraid to report such acts because they're snitching on others they know, how we're too afraid to do anything and it just lets it happen over and over again. And what does Mindy McGinnis do? She throws it in our faces because we need to see this.
This book bashes on so many stereotypes and sins of our world. You see the girl who lives behind a nickname, who isn't the perfect princess she's expected to be. You see the girl behind all the make-up, the one who appears "easy" but is more than just a pretty face. You see the boy who seems like he has everything but really has nothing. You see the boy who doesn't understand. You see the girl who tries to hold it all inside, the weird girl, the one that no one ever notices, and the one that refuses to sit by like everyone else.
Alex described herself right when she said she was a wolf. Our society has bred sheep, and it's only the wolves, the ones who are different, who fight, who survive, that make a difference.
Gods this book is just beautiful.
We hear the phrase "boys will be boys" often enough but the fact that the phrase exists, that we allow one gender to act a certain way as if it's acceptable when the reality is far from the truth is disgusting. The scene that this is mentioned in, by the way, was so utterly perfect and true that it's scary.
This whole book takes place in a small town. I grew up in a small town. I still live in that small town (for the time being). Everything that was said about small towns hit hard. Everyone knows everyone. No one speaks up against someone else because of that little fact. So many times I caught wind of rumors in high school of encounters in families, with friends, that should have been reported but no one ever did. No one wanted to rat their friends or family out.
And this book. It just takes that and smashes it into your head. This is our culture. And it's wrong.
I feel like I've gone on too long without mentioning the other two protagonists, Peekay (named so for being the Preacher's Kid aka PK) and Jack (star athlete, student, ladies man). Peekay had the kindness that Alex lacked after bottling all that anger in. She was the friend that Alex needed and she, herself, was such a strong presence in the book but also not, if that makes sense. She had her own life but in this story it's more about how that changed with Alex. Jack had it all: he was a top athlete, top of his class (competing against Alex), and he got around. But it was clear that his life lacked something, for all the good he had it really didn't mean anything in the end. I loved watching his character grow and gain a purpose beyond sleeping with every girl that threw herself at him. In a way, both Jack and Peekay changed because of Alex, and they helped change the girl who played with darkness and almost won.
Now, this is going to sound crazy, but I actually almost put this book down about a third of the way through because of the violence and graphic scenes involving animals. I don't have many triggers that strong but that's one of them, and those scenes were written in such a vivid manner that it was hard to move past them (though I'm glad I did).
That's the real strength of this book, I think. The writing lures you in, both interesting in the storytelling style and just generally captivating. Then you're led farther, past your comfort zone, past those topics that you only hear whispered about, the ones that you know exist but just block out. But you keep going and soon you can't ignore them. And that's the worst part of The Female of the Species. You're forced to face that which is ugly, which is disgusting and wrong and dark and terrible in the world.
This is not a lighthearted book. Don't expect happy endings and good times. But it is powerful and emotional and will train-wreck that perfect bubble you have in your mind about the world.
It's hard to tell someone to read something that might upset them, that might change how they think about things, that might cause more pain than good. But this is a book that I believe everyone should read. This is one that I wish I read when I was in high school, when I heard those rumors and didn't look into them because I didn't think it was my place. This is a book that will tear you from the inside out and in the end you will be stronger for it.
This is The Female of the Species and we have more power than you may think.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
I'm giving this book four stars because I loved it. I loved it
By Amazon Customer
Ugh. Ugh! I'm giving this book four stars because I loved it. I loved it. It's dark, and at times it's brutal honesty could probably cause a flinch: it's unflinching at calling out gendered differences (and in some instances, briefly examining them) and expectations and the inherent power balances and structures between women and men. It's honest and some might say dramatic, but I appreciated it nevertheless. For me, it was just honest. It had a cold, distant form of writing which was more than likely intentional and that set the whole tone for me. I loved it.
I loved one of the main characters, Alex. I found her refreshing because we very rarely get to examine or even see women protagonists (or...antagonists, as she might be?) be angry, let alone have uncontrollable anger issues. Women are taught to curb their rage and Alex's continued manifestation of it through violent acts and thoughts, for me, was something intriguing and wonderful to see in a novel. The trivialization of Alex's anger, an emotion that consumes her from early childhood onward, is so true to the trivialization of women's anger in general and to see that reflection in a YA novel? Incredible.
I found the story organic, the situations normal and not out of place, the characters realistic, though some elements were not necessarily entirely believable (if the town is so small that everyone knows everyone, more than likely the police could have been able to trace Alex's crime[s] back to her: whether they would have wanted to is a different story, of course). Still, these things are easy to overlook and honestly, I found the brutal honesty and teenage philosophy on life well-written, well crafted, and realistic. I couldn't put this book down: I stayed up until nearly 4am reading it because I'd made the mistake of starting reading it at night.
Still, I'm giving this book five stars, but I have to say, I am a bit resentful about the ending, and the only reason I'm not docking it to four stars is because the disappointment is more a personal preference than any issues with execution. It's a personal preference and so I know I shouldn't let it affect my review, but with a character like this being such a rarity, I tend to get very protective of them. Also the realism begins to unravel a bit towards the end and though I should have probably seen the ending coming, it was still not what I expected. It resolves very well nonetheless, and ends on very believable terms, but for me it was just too jarring and felt cheap. I'm also wary as to such a representation of women's anger ending on such abrupt terms, though of course we still have other characters, and perhaps that was the point: to show that violence is not the answer. In which case, it's actually a great ending in the moral sense, but I myself did not like it.
Nevertheless, I loved this book. Over all, I would say you should definitely read this book. My personal biases and preferences aside, it was an addicting and dark read and though it might be difficult to stomach, we need more stories with the elements presented herein, including female anger and a discussion on how gender and sexual expectation and biases affects everyone and in what ways it does.
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