Skip to main content

There’s Someone Inside Your House by Stephanie Perkins Review

Hey ForeverBookers, 

Did you all have a good Halloween? I was reading and watching TV throughout that day! I’ve just finished "There’s Someone Inside Your House" by Stephanie Perkins. It was better than I thought it would be. When I read her "Anna And The French Kiss" trilogy I didn’t love it. I didn’t hate it either but it was kind of meh. I can remember liking Lola, the second book the most, which I think is an unpopular opinion. 

3.5 Stars!

The murders themselves are quite bloody and disturbing so if you’re adverse to blood,  gore and mutilation or under 15, I wouldn’t advise reading it! 

Readathons

I read “There’s Someone Inside Your House” for a few readathons, again. 

For the Litwits: Team Sherlock group - Reading a YA contemporary book. 

For Reading Rivalry - A book I regret not starting sooner. 

For The Popsugar 2018 Challenge- A book set on Halloween (I started it ON Halloween so it made sense that I read it for this challenge!)

For HouseViking in the BookDemocracy group on Facebook, for "Black Cover" because it's black with accents of bright pink.

Spoilers Below...

The main character of “There’s Someone Inside Your House” is Makani. She’s a biracial girl who’s from Hawaii. The events of the book take place in Nebraska though, after Makani moves in with her Grandmother there. Her parents don’t care about her. This is why she’s moved across America to be with her Grandma. 

Makani doesn’t have that many friends at school. She only has two, as well as Olly, who she “likes”. The author did a great job, putting a biracial character at the forefront of events. Also, bringing sex into the story in a non graphic way should be praised, I think. 

The story itself while good didn’t blow me away. It gripped me in parts but was a little stale in others. The murderer wasn’t who I expected. I thought it would be one of the main characters, which it wasn’t. I won’t spoil who it is because that’s basically all the story is based on. If I told you who it is there really isn’t much point to reading the rest of the book. 

The characters, other than Makani all had a role to play. There weren’t any not needed characters. She had her grandmother to rely on as well as her friends and Ollie. Ollie’s brother is a policeman so he keeps the characters as well as us, the reader, up to date on what’s happening with the case against the murderer. There was the murderer, and the murdered, who should have had more of the plot. It would have been interesting to see the mindset of the murderer, which alas we don’t get, but there were minimal characters, which I’ve said before, I like. When there are too many, it feels like the plot is too busy or that the characters are just there without actually doing anything to move the plot along. Neither of those things were the case here. 

“I should tell him. I have to tell him. I can’t hide anymore.”

It’s revealed that Makani hurt someone from her past. She’s very resentful of this fact and knows she needs to tell Ollie. Can she, though? You’ll need to read to find out. 

That quote above makes it look like the story is told in first person narrative. It’s not but I didn’t mind it in this case. Sometimes, I don’t like 3rd person narrative because it makes the story boring for me. I like to see the inner workings of a person but “There’s Someone Inside Your House” I feel we still got that. The author has a way of writing that just makes me want to read! I found this with her "Anna And The French Kiss" trilogy, too. 

Overall then, I liked “There’s Someone Inside Your House”Was it the best literature I’ve ever read? No but did it keep me on the edge of my seat? Yes - that’s why I’m giving the book 3.5 stars! I would maybe like another book about the characters that survive the events of "There’s Someone Inside Your House"...

Stand by for my next review, coming soon...


Comments

  1. Aw no I personally loved this book! I think the gore did it for me haha!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's cool :). I expected more gore if I'm to be honest from reviews that I'd read previously.

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Forest Of Adventures (The Knight Trilogy #1) by Katie M John

Hi ForeverBookers,  I have a new book to add to my list of favourites! The Forest Of Adventures is a great book if you love romance, adventure and history/fantasy as it has all of those elements.  This book is mature in some aspects so I'd say only age 16+ readers should read it. It doesn't get graphic but sex is still brought up.  We see from Mina's perspective throughout so the main girl in this story, who's seventeen years old. She's at college when she sits next to a boy, Blake Beldevier. He's a very charmingly mysterious guy. Mina is already in a relationship with Sam. A guy she's known from years before this book starts but she's attracted to Blake. When Sam sees Mina walking with Blake one afternoon at college, he gets angry and has a car crash. The rest of the book centres around this accident and Mina's relationship with Blake as well as other characters, her mother for instance who has always wanted Mina to marry Sam when she&#

Brighid's Quest (Partholon Series #5 Review) by PC Cast Review

Hi ForeverBookers,  This book was good.  It took me about 150 pages to really get in to unfourtunately, and even then I really only enjoyed the last half of the book.  This tells more the story of centaur huntress Brighid, although we do see others stories' within this book as well.  Spoilers below! The first 100 or so pages have nothing to really do with the overall plot. It's just Brighid and Cuchulainn (Cu) going to find the femorians that killed Brenna, Cu's lost love. Cu is hell bent on redemption at first but when he gets to know the "new femorians" he doesn't want to hurt them as most of them are only children without parents. He wants to bring them back to find their own redemption at Macallan Castle with Clan Macallan. The new femorians are given the power of restoration by the Goddess Epona. This kind of does come into play right at the end of the novel but I didn't think we needed everything the author gave us to understand what Cu and Brighid w

A Court Of Silver Flames (ACOTAR #5) by Sarah J Maas Review

Hi ForeverBookers,  How have you all been since the beginning of 2024? I haven’t checked in much, I know, but I’ve still been reading! Last night, I finished “A Court of Silver Flames” (“ACOSF”),  by Sarah J Maas, which I ABSOLUTELY ADORED! It was so, so, so, so, SOOOOO good!!!  It tells the story of Nesta, rather than Feyre, the character which the other “ACOTAR” books have all focused on. I honestly didn’t think I would like it much because I’m a total Feyre and the man she ends up with fangirl and I REALLY didn’t like Nesta in the other books or what there was of her, anyway, but OMG was I WRONG! Never judge a book, until you’ve read it, is all I’ll say… “ACOSF” is told from 3rd person POV which I thought I’d hate, because I like being inside the main female character’s head and seeing and feeling exactly what she is. Nesta, while told from 3rd person POV though, has a huge breakthrough with the reader, I believe. She was a very hateful character in the first books, told fro