Member Reviews
There was much to enjoy here, but I found I couldn't connect with it. I'd read more from this author in the future though. |
Unfortunately, I have not been able to read and review this book. After losing and replacing my broken Kindle and getting a new phone I was unable to download the title again for review as it was no longer available on Netgalley. I’m really sorry about this and hope that it won’t affect you allowing me to read and review your titles in the future. Thank you so much for giving me this opportunity. Natalie. |
What did I just read?! That was my first thought after finishing this novel. I knew this was weird going into it because of other reviewers, but still. I did immensely enjoy the first 60% of this book, but then it lost me. I couldn't follow what was going on. I do appreciate a weird book, and I liked the writing in this one but I have to have some general idea of what is going on. I find it hard to rate this book, because I really did enjoy the first half. |
Thanks to Head of Zeus and NetGalley for the Advance Review Copy in exchange for an honest review. I don’t think I really “got” this book, but I enjoyed it despite that. I’ve read a lot of comments comparing it to Heathers and it's got the same kind of weird feel to it. I’m not even really sure how I would describe it, college cliques and outsiders with a healthy dollop of magical realism? It’s honestly completely bonkers but also a lot of fun too. It definitely wont be for everyone and you probably wouldn’t give it to your grandmother to read but it’s certaintly a unique and interesting novel. |
I put this down, I didn't like it. It felt juvenile and worse than a Young Adult book. I've seen people on Instagram that love this and apparently I'm missing something here. |
I loved this book so much. It’s beautifully written, darkly poetic and moody, self aware and sharp. It completely captured me. Magical realism gone very, very wrong. I can’t recommend it enough. |
If this means anything to you: *gif from Heathers: How Very* then you probably ought to read Bunny by Mona Awad. But be warned, it's a bizarre book - campus-lit meets magic realism meets what-the-hell-was-that meets Weird Science... In a clear homage to Heathers, Awad has created a story about a clique of post-grad narrative arts students, known as the Bunnies. They attend Warren, a small New England college. It begins with a party, or rather a 'Demitasse' because '...this school is too Ivy and New England to call a party a party.' The narrator, Samantha, who privately refers to the Bunnies as the 'Cuntscapades', hates their preening, their simpering language, the '...A-line hems of their cupcake dresses...' and the ornate braids in their '...Game of Thrones hair.' Yet despite her outward disdain for the Bunnies, Samantha is morbidly curious about these women whose post-grad experience appears to be far more productive than her own - No way in hell they would ever invite me to Smut Salon. That was their own private Bunny thing, like Touching Tuesdays or binge-watching The Bachelorette or making little woodland creatures out of marzipan. But the Bunnies do invite Samantha to their soirée and, ignoring her best friend Ava's scorn, Samantha enters their strange world, filled with pastel coloured frocks, mini foods, group hugs and mutual adoration. Plus some rituals where the Bunnies conjure men from rabbits, according to their idea of a 'dream man' - "Perhaps then we could draw from film, winkingly indulge in some campy nostalgia," offers Bunny. This means Bunny wants James Dean again, leaning against a wooden post again. John Cusack in Say Anything again, holding up his boom box in the rain again. It's frightening stuff and Awad successfully blurs the line between satire and horror. Although the story is rife with wolfmen wearing glitter, decapitations, and campus muggings, the dialogue is alarmingly realistic, probably because Awad skewers campus life and academia so perfectly. She describes '...the students walking here and there, discussing Derrida and their nose jobs...', exposes the ridiculousness of the language, and the pompous ideas - I still don't quite understand what it means to write about The Body with title caps but I always nod like I do. Oh yes, The Body, of course. Other words I've been keeping track of: space, gesture, and perform. "I appreciate the uncertainty the piece gestures toward... I just think she could go further into the dream space." Awad's razor-sharp one-liners are poetic - 'I am quiet as rainbows' and '...clapping her hands like he's an approaching parade' - as well as funny - 'Last night seems as unspeakable as money or a fart' and 'She gives me the full hate bouquet of her smile. Every fuck you flower' and '...the poets brace themselves for imminent, overeducated poverty.' Her descriptions are arresting. Of her ex-boyfriend's voice, Samantha says - 'He had one of those deep, serene, all-knowing voices like a documentary narrator. Like any moment he could tell you a fact about a penguin or the war and you'd believe him. It was soothing. But sexy too. Like a tongue was being dragged up your inner thigh every time he said hi.' And in their writing workshop, Samantha notes that the Bunnies '...would look down at each story I submitted like it was a baby that just gave them the finger, and then side-eye each other for a long time.' Although Awad's antagonists obviously riff off the likes of Heathers, Carrie and Mean Girls, and it seems she leans on these references a little too much at times, the writing is so sharp and memorable that you can't help but think how much you appreciate Awad's gesture toward creating a new space for the campus-lit-science-fiction-satire-trope (see what I did there?). 4/5 Original and very, very clever. I received my copy of Bunny from the publisher, Head of Zeus, via NetGalley, in exchange for an honest review. |
Stephie C, Bookseller
Hands down the best book of 2019 and probably one of my personal favourites ever. The writing was clever, the story was deliciously weird and the whole book was a thrill to read from start to end. I know this book won’t be for everyone, but it’s definitely for me. 5 stars. |
Louisa S, Librarian
Samantha Mackay is studying at New England's Warren University. A scholarship student, her fellow workshop participants are a group of seemingly fluffy and twee girls who call each other Bunny. Gradually Samantha is drawn in to the Bunny Coven. I think some people will love this book and initially I really enjoyed the descriptions of the Bunnies, but I'm afraid it wasn't for me. |
Carol S, Educator
YUCK. This was recommended by Indie next? I think its the only one I've read that was recommended that I did not enjoy in the least. |
This book was certainly very unique. I'd suggest going in it knowing nothing and discover if it'll speak to you or not. I really enjoyed its weirdness and quirkiness. It was well written and very interesting. Thanks a lot to the publisher and NetGalley for this copy in exchange for an honest review. |
Hilary W, Reviewer
A Bunny might be fluffy, but this novel certainly isn’t. Rabbits have teeth and claws and can kick and bite. This is my second Awad novel and she still does not take prisoners. She is a brilliant writer so expect a visceral, vibrant novel with ideas and attitude – a very distinct attitude – and be warned that this one is even closer to the edge of the extraordinary – her particular vision of this tale. Without giving too much of the plot line away: Samantha Heather MacKey has won a scholarship to the creative writing programme at Warren College. From a more deprived background, and coping with a shortage of money and courage too, she feels very much an outsider. As she approaches her second session she has found two possible friends Ryan a student poet and Ava, a college drop out. She has apparently had a falling out with her male supervisor after a possible incident. Even worse for the first time in her life she is suffering from writer’s block. But the nature of a writing course is – we are told – to regularly produce samples of your work for review by your peers – other students and aspiring writers. Samantha is selected to join a “new initiative” for the College, the first woman only group. She will be expected to work with a tutor and four other students collectively known as “the bunnies” – because that is – we are told – they always refer to each other as bunny. They are close, supportive, better dressed and more secure than Samantha. She will be issued with an invite to the “smut salon” the private meetings of the bunnies where they meet and discuss literature and their writing in a social setting. This is where the novel becomes progressively weirder. Attendance at the group means she steps back from her friendship with Ava, It turns out that the girls do not just discuss writing they also create something more. Strange beings. Samantha is required to attend to bring another element of ideas to the creative mix. Once she tries to break away, she sees that things do not seem entirely normal she has to revert back to her previous student life. This is a novel of an outsider being used to explore what a person will do, or not, to try and fit in with their surroundings. Simple so far. But remember the novel is placed in a writing course so it has to be about more. What is real and what is fiction? How do you create? What are your inspirations? How much of your creations are based on the truth and how much not? It then follows that you might need to explore how real your words or world are to you. Awad will tug you down those thoughts, but do not expect a quiet or straightforward path. This route is extraordinary, compelling, but occasionally somewhat worrying too. Did Alice really see a white rabbit when she passed through the looking glass? This is another exploration of a stressed psyche – or possibly a story-line that is heading to the edge of the fantasy scale. Definitely one to read and see what you think. Where does the line between fiction and reality lie? Is it the same for all writers? And for all of us, the readers, the question is what is the balance of your life – when you are well, and happy, or lonely, stressed and disconsolate? Enjoy! |
I struggled to think what to say about this book. It's beautifully written, and so very weird that I just couldn't decide whether I liked it or not. Thanks to the publishers for sharing it. |
I really wanted to like this but I simply couldn’t finish it. It was hard for me to gauge the age of these characters and when it was revealed to me I felt it wasn’t believable given the storyline. It was all very bizarre and I thought that it might just be me but I have since seen that I am not alone in thinking this is a weird book. |
Believe what everyone's saying about Bunny - Mona Awad's latest novel based on her experiences studying for an MFA is totally bonkers. Imagine if Ottessa Moshfegh had written Mean Girls and then chucked in some witchcraft and a bit of the plot of the movie Heathers and you'd be on your way to understanding what reading Bunny is like. While this isn't really my "thing" on paper (I'll fully admit I requested this because of the hype surrounding it), and while I'm sure it won't be for some I found this unputdownable. Set in a college campus in a town called Warren (yep) where people are decapitated across the university on a reasonably frequent basis, we follow Samantha, an MFA student who views a clique of girls - the Bunnies of the title - on her course from afar with a kind of morbid/jealous fascination. Samantha is a bit of an outcast (only having one friend, Ava, an art school dropout), and against her better judgement becomes embroiled in the weird activities the Bunnies after they invite her to their "Smut Salon". I'll leave the plot summary there to avoid spoilers, but if any of the above sounds up your street I'd implore you to pick up Bunny - there's something weirdly compelling about this novel and it's certainly the most unique book I've read so far in 2019. |
Wow, this is a blast! Firstly, Awad can write - her prose is fizzing and dynamic, surprising and just so <i>fresh</i>. Add to that a weird, funny, oh-so-knowing storyline that shoots off allusions in all directions (the campus novel, Mean Girls, The Secret History, Twilight-esque tweenie books) while also paying homage to Angela Carter's dark, feminist versions of fairy tales [book:The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories|49011]) and managing a blisteringly funny exposé of Creative Writing programmes. And piled up on that are observations on female friendship, Romance (definitely with a capital R), fantasies of love and friendship, the way eroticism is culturally constructed and the complicated relationship it has with violence. I could see traces of [author:Ottessa Moshfegh|3276202] and [author:Joyce Carol Oates|3524] in the dark and canny mix - two of my favourite contemporary authors. My only slight criticism is that the pacing can be a bit slow in parts, but this is so original, and manages to be clever, funny, creative, icky, a bit creepy, and <i>sui generis</i> all at once. |
Unfortunately, this wasn't for me. I found the writing style bland in places but in other places quite odd. For example, Smackie would be in conversation with 'the bunnies' but there would be several paragraphs of what she's thinking before the dialogue continued. I would find myself forgetting she was even talking to other people by the time the conversation picked up again. The story was also very slow and even by the quarter way point, it felt like nothing significant had happened. |
Morgan S, Reviewer
I received an advanced reader’s copy in exchange for an honest review The beginning of the book is super creepy because the bunnies are grown ass grad school women acting like teenagers. The disconnect is really weird and I felt very uncomfortable moving back-and-forth from the protagonists actual grown-up life into the bunnies‘ Mean Girls from Hell scenario. But it’s really all is set up for the truly weird freaky shit that these bunnies do. Interesting allegorical take on female friendship |
A fever dream of alienation and peer pressure taken to violent extremes - delicious. Everyone remembers high school. The cliques, the gossip, the drama. Either you were 'in' or you were out. BUNNY ramps this up to eleven in graduate school, Samantha was always the one looking in and looking down on the cliques, who were everything she wasn't. But when they invite her into their rarified world, she cannot say no. It's this wanting that paints the most violent pictures in this novel, as the ideas of want and desire and acceptance mesh with hallucinations and cultish fetishism. Read it - I won't spoil the contents, but prepare to be sucked into the world of the "Bunnies". Recommeded for fans of reality-warping! |
This wasn’t at all what I was expecting (a straightforward campus novel set in a creative writing department), and that’s not necessarily a bad thing. At the beginning I was a little irritated by how unrealistic some of the characters were, but once the more speculative elements of the novel were realised that irritation wore off and I could enjoy the experimentalism. I was slightly confused towards the end, unsure of just how everything tied up, but perhaps that was intentional. |








