Summary: Katrina Kim may be broke, the black sheep of her family, and slightly unhinged, but she isn’t a stalker. Her obsession with her co-worker, Kurt, is just one of many coping mechanisms — like her constant shape and number rituals, or the way scenes from her favorite children’s book bleed into her vision whenever she feels anxious or stressed.
But when Katrina finds a cryptic message from Kurt that implies he’s aware of her surveillance, her tenuous hold on a normal life crumbles. Driven by compulsion, she enacts the most powerful ritual she has to reclaim control — a midnight visit to the Cayatoga Bridge — and arrives just in time to witness Kurt’s suicide. Before he jumps, he slams her with a devastating accusation: his death is all her fault.
Horrified, Katrina combs through the clues she’s collected about Kurt over the last three years, but each revelation uncovers a menacing truth: for every moment she was watching him, he was watching her. And the past she thought she’d left behind? It’s been following her more closely than she ever could have imagined.
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐1/2
My Thoughts: Wow. Where do I start? This book was phenomenal. And also kind of a mind f*ck. So many things you think you know, but you don’t.
Katrina is quite unstable, but she is still managing to live her day to day life, for the most part. Aside from seeing another world and basically stalking her co-worker, Kurt. I think the unique part about the stalking in this book is because she is not even romantically interested in him, she just wants to know who he is. That’s it.
I kind of thought there was something off about Leoni, Katrina’s roommate from the beginning. She wasn’t ever around, but still seemed to know what was going on.
After Kurt disappears, things get really interesting. Katrina tries to figure out what really happened to him, and it’s a crazy journey. One that leads her to her hometown and a lot of secrets, some that even involve her family.
I highly recommend this book. It’s a great thriller.
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