Originally from Southern California, Joe Hong is currently a PhD student in Comparative Literature at Rutgers University. While he has a passion for all literary form, Joe has recently been inspired by the novels and short stories written by contemporary American writers, which has led him to pursue writing this column for Dappered. His other pastimes include watch collecting and craft whiskies.
Possibly my greatest pet peeve is spoilers. And because it goes back and forth between past and present, this novel is definitely tough to review without spoilers. The Wicked Girls begins with a present-day narrative revolving around the murders of young women in a small resort town called Whitmouth. One of Whitmouth’s main tourist attractions is an amusement park where one of the novel’s main characters, Amber Gordon, works as lower-level management. As a result of the serial murders, the novel’s second protagonist Kirsty Lindsay, a journalist, visits the town to investigate the disturbing events.
While the storytelling is refined, I found this novel’s most important quality to be its representation of the journalist. For Marwood, journalistic writing seems to be a troubling endeavor. In the world of The Wicked Girls, reporting the news is embedded in delicate and complex personal histories. Given her professional experience in the field, I found Marwood’s portrayal of the journalist to be brutally honest. As the events in Ferguson and Iraq were escalating while I was reading The Wicked Girls, the figure of the journalist in this novel gave me a fruitful way for understanding how we spread and consume information.
Although I recommend this novel without reservation, reading it is definitely an unsettling experience. While the story’s twists induce quite the adrenaline rush, Marwood’s prose forces you to dive into the repulsive grittiness that is Whitmouth. Overall, it’s a consistently balanced read: The Wicked Girls provides uncut suspense with a haunting, contemplative edge.
From wheelhouse standards like chinos and sweaters, to fancy holiday stuff like velvet blazers and…
Weekend update: JCF drops the price on those suede boots to under $80 (final sale…
Fall textures. Smoothly suited. Dark and sleek. Etc.
In person with an iconic loafer... in a not so classic shade.
It's autumnal temptation time. Coats. Boots. Blazers. Sweaters. Shoes.
Brooks Brothers also gets in on the "sale's on sale" act.