![]() ![]() What worked really well for me about this book were the body horror elements and the perspective. ![]() I wouldn’t classify this book as weird fiction, but it definitely becomes pretty bizarre. It’s a more horrific world than she could have imagined. From this point forward, Samantha gets further and further sucked into the world of the Bunnies. Samantha is surviving on her own, bolstered by time with her sarcastic friend, Ava, until she gets invited to The Bunnies’ private reading time. ![]() At the top of the social hierarchy are the Bunnies, a group of wealthy, pretentious women that spend all their time together and gather for their own private readings. She is a writer, but doesn’t fit in with the rest of her class. Samantha Heather Mackie is a graduate student getting her creative writing degree at Yale- I mean, Warren University. I won’t be spoiling the book in this review, so I can’t get into the exact details of what goes down, but I will give you an overview of how smart this book is and why I liked it so much. ![]() It involves some truly hideous and harrowing moments, but always couches those in sarcasm and black comedy. Mona Awad’s Bunny is a grotesque, Ivy-League version of Mean Girls. ![]()
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