My Sweet Girl
Books | Fiction / Thrillers / Psychological
4
Amanda Jayatissa
WINNER OF THE ITW THRILLER AWARD FOR BEST FIRST NOVEL“My Sweet Girl pushes the boundaries of what a thriller can do.”—The Washington Post“Fiendish [and] full of twists…. Sri Lankan author Amanda Jayatissa keeps us guessing and worrying until the very end.” —The New York Times“A thriller centered on the meaning of identity and all the layers it can have.”—NPRPaloma thought her perfect life would begin once she was adopted and made it to America, but she’s about to find out that no matter how far you run, your past always catches up to you… Ever since she was adopted from a Sri Lankan orphanage, Paloma has had the best of everything—schools, money, and parents so perfect that she fears she'll never live up to them. Now at thirty years old and recently cut off from her parents’ funds, she decides to sublet the second bedroom of her overpriced San Francisco apartment to Arun, who recently moved from India. Paloma has to admit, it feels good helping someone find their way in America—that is until Arun discovers Paloma's darkest secret, one that could jeopardize her own fragile place in this country. Before Paloma can pay Arun off, she finds him face down in a pool of blood. She flees the apartment but by the time the police arrive, there's no body—and no evidence that Arun ever even existed in the first place. Paloma is terrified this is all somehow tangled up in the desperate actions she took to escape Sri Lanka so many years ago. Did Paloma’s secret die with Arun or is she now in greater danger than ever before?
AD
Buy now:
More Details:
Author
Amanda Jayatissa
Pages
384
Publisher
Penguin
Published Date
2021-09-14
ISBN
0593335082 9780593335086
Community ReviewsSee all
"This quote sums up the main character’s inner monologue and attitude throughout this book: “I visited her profile and scrolled through carefully—I didn’t want to accidentally like something and have her know I was stalking her. She’d posted something about the ‘benefits of a vegan diet’. She’d captioned it: ‘I just really care what I put into my body.’ I saw the boys you dated in high school, Christina. You most certainly do not.”<br/><br/>The MC is constantly cussing, is incredibly unreliable, and having a lot of internal dialogue about feminist and racist topics like people of color changing their names to “more accessible and easy” English names, how she’s constantly seen as exotic, and how her philanthropic adoptive mother used her adoption of a foreign orphan to bolster her image with her rich, white community.<br/><br/>All that plus a dual perspective of a little girl from the past in the Sri Lankan orphanage and a twisty thriller. I didn’t guess what was actually going on until like a few pages before it was actually revealed. Fun read!"