Cover Image: The Interview

The Interview

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

There was one point when I wondered why I was reading this, a seemingly unrelenting tale of misery and abuse. By the end however, I realised I had not only learned something, but enjoyed the journey. You will be desperate for Jenny to find peace, eager to learn why Laura is so shaken and for her to find her own peace and really want to spend a night out with Laura’s colleague Niamh, who seems to have life sorted. Hovering throughout on the edge of horror, we are left at the end with hope.

Was this review helpful?

Unfortunately the pace was far too slow for me and I struggled to vonnect with any of the characters. For this reason it has to be a dnf.

Was this review helpful?

The Interview by Gill Perdue tackles some very difficult topics/subjects in which we meet our characters - Jenny, a 14 year old girl and Laura which is a victim support officer sent to interview her. Begins off with a slow start but gradually does pick up. I liked this book, it is a little different from the usual genres of police procedural which i really liked but the book does talk a bit about difficult subjects which i did find it is sad but the author wrote the interview exceptionally well and was a very good read. I look forward to reading any upcoming books the author may release in the upcoming future.

Thank you to NetGalley and Penguin Books UK for this advanced copy read in exchange for my honest review.

Was this review helpful?

An intriguing premise, but the execution doesn't do it justice.

This Dublin set novel features a pair of detectives interviewing a fourteen year old girl. She was found covered in blood - not her own. And her stepfather is missing. Laura and Neave attempt to find the truth, but Jenny isn't making it easy, talking of fairy tales and a mystic island. What is she hiding?

Three quarters of the book comprises a series of interviews, with point of view switching repeatedly between the three main characters. There is a massive amount of repetition and very little to move the narrative forward. Little detail is given of the investigation that is presumably going on outside the interview room. No mention of clues, suspects or theories. Just interminable questions with few answers. Both Laura and Jenny are prone to recalling past incidents at length, so the pace is far too slow to keep the reader's attention.

Was this review helpful?

3.5 stars from me!!

I loved the premise of this book but it just fell a little flat for me unfortunately.

I loved the different points of view and the chapters alternating.

I feel not an awful lot happened in the book. It’s probably more of a character driven novel than a plot driven one. But for me I didn’t feel the characters were developed enough and therefore I didn’t feel connected to any of them.

However I was keen to pick it up each time I did and find out what happened to Jenny and her family.

Still an enjoyable read! Just not as gripping as I expected it to be.

Was this review helpful?

An incredibly complex story with the two main characters being a young victim of domestic and sexual abuse and her contact in the Guarda, the Irish Police Force, who needs to gather information that will enable the Force to arrest her abuser. The victim is protecting herself by not acknowledging recent events, and is converting her trauma into stories and fairy tales. A massive obstacle is that it is not just known victims that have, or are, suffering. Others involved are desperately trying to get through this case while dealing with their own past traumas, mental anguish and memories that are triggered by the victim's story.

Was this review helpful?

I was excited by the concept of this, and did enjoy the dual perspective but I wasn’t as engaged and interested as much as I had hoped. I liked the start and the ending, but the middle fell flat for me and felt quite repetitive

Was this review helpful?

I’m a bit on the fence with this book.
It is well written,the characters are great and it deals with one hell of a gritty subject matter.
I can’t say it’s not a book for me but it is a book I put down ,left for a few days but always came back to. It may be the subject matter, to allow me to process and reflect I don’t know.
It’s clever in that I couldn’t leave it but I also couldn’t stop thinking about it and could remember all that went before when I picked it up again.

Was this review helpful?

The Spiel sounded intriguing. A 14 year old girl being interviewed, her mother and brother seriously injured in hospital, her abusive Step-father missing. She isnt saying a word. Is she a victim, a witness or a perpetrator?

How this book panned out however left very little intrigue, tension or interest. The problems for me at least, were many.

For a start, our central character Laura, the lead detective, I found incredibly annoying throughout. Like so much so that I hadnt an ounce of interest in her or her story. Sure she has had trauma in her life and is not in the best place and I`m not trying to down play those whatsoever but we keeping hearing from her partner Niamh what a fantastic and cool headed detective she is. The perfect mentor. Hello, has someone robbed the real Laura and replaced her with this borderline narcissist? Incompetence after incompetence and all we get is the odd "cop on" from Niamh.
Also the way she treated her husband like a doormat and yet he was cool and fine with it. Come on like.

The story is narrated from three different viewpoints, each of the detectives -Laura and Niamh and also the teenage girl Jenny.
Again, Jenny I found incredibly annoying. "Dumb bitch" this and "dumb bitch" that. It is used three time in one paragraph alone. It was incredibly tiresome. Yes there is a link to her abuse and again I`m in no way trying to downplay it but we are sledgehammered with this phrase from her throughout the whole book by the author. As subtle as a brick.

The first two thirds of this book are incredibly slow with little or nothing happening in the main story. Its basically the two detectives "interviewing" Jenny with them trying to get her to talk. " Come on Jenny you are safe here, tell us where he is" and Jenny in her own head saying "dumb bitch dumb bitch". Interview ends for the day and we get some mostly irrelevant soap opera like filler of the detectives life stories that are of no interest whatsoever. Then back we go to the interview with the same exchanges, and this takes up more than half the book.

By the time something did happen and the story started moving, I really didnt care about any of the characters or what happened to them and actually found them extremely irritating.

It all comes to its inevitable conclusion with "dumb bitch" going into hyperdrive in the last few chapters.

Some really serious subject matters here are told in the most laborious and uninteresting way with terribly written characters and an even worse book.

I`m sorry to be so down on this book but it left me annoyed at so many junctures that I would be anything but honest if I didnt vent my true feelings.

Thanks to the publisher for the ARC through Netgalley.

Was this review helpful?

Garda Laura Shaw based in Dublin, is interviewing Jennifer, a traumatised fourteen-year-old girl, found in shock and covered in blood but Jenny is not talking. Laura’s colleague, Niamh is taking notes and monitoring. Jenny's stepfather is missing and her mother and younger brother are also found, both unconscious and seriously injured.

Although this book is well written, I found it hard to get in to, mainly because I found one of the main characters, Laura irritating and unprofessional, being preoccupied with a trauma in her own past and refusing to acknowledge or get help with her mental health issues. I carried on with the book and enjoyed the ending, which neatly tied everything up.

Was this review helpful?

DNF. Sorry. I quite enjoyed first 20pc but the story wasn’t going anyway. Traumatised girl being interviewed by police psychologist - we get it, but chapter by chapter the story should progress. Not stay still re establishing the fact that the girl is traumatised, the lead interviewer has her own issues (which frankly make her appear bad at the job…) may well get way better, but I was bored and irritated so gave up

Was this review helpful?

I don't usually read much fiction with lots of police procedural content, but I'm pleased I made an exception for this. The story is told through the perceptions of Laura, Niamh - two Irish Garda - and Jenny - who is a disturbed teenager with information on a crime, but she isn't speaking. The character development of these main characters was great, although I felt we could have had a bit more on an arc for Niamh. Laura and Jenny's stories cross over in a remarkable way, which gives Laura the insight to help her. But - is Jenny all she seems? The pace is very good and Perdue writes Jenny's voice with skill. And does the same with Laura. I felt Niamh's perspective wasn't entirely necessary and didn't add a great deal to the story. Perhaps there will be a follow up with Laura and Niamh working together again.

Was this review helpful?

I was given an ARC of this book and I found the topic disturbing but very well done.

The story is brutal. It’s written from three points of view in the first-person narrative – Laura, Jenny and Niamh. Each of the characters is well-developed, each distinctive, each interesting, each having a story of their own.

When Jenny is brought into the special interview with Laura (the interviewer) and Niamh (the note taker), the atmosphere is tense. A man is missing and something terrible has happened to others. The truth must be found but Jenny (witness, victim, criminal?) speaks of imaginary places and people.

I liked how the story was split into three perspectives – Jenny’s certainly gave insight into the horrors of her life. Laura’s secret is eating its way into her sanity, resurfacing because of this case and Jenny’s situation. Niamh is the happiest of them, and we understand why – she’s wise and loving and understanding.

The themes are harrowing but I don’t want to give spoilers. It’s fast-paced and definitely a page-turner. I thought the writing style suited the story, while the suspense and mystery heightened the experience.

Highly recommended, though be warned, it’s emotional and raw.

Was this review helpful?

This was not an easy read and I do feel it could be triggering for some. That said, it tackles a range of topics that need to be spoken about more. When 14 year old Jenny is found hypothermic and covered in blood, two special detectives are set the task of finding out what happened to her and if she knows where her step-father is.

I found it a slow start but once it picked up, it was a page turner - albeit a rather heartbreaking one. Perdue writes well and I really liked the way she slowly divulged Jenny's story, through a dark sort of fairy tale - it added to the mystery and was well done.

Was this review helpful?

Sorry but The Interview was a did not finish for me as it was too slow going and very difficult to get into

It does cover some potentially difficult themes but wasn’t for me

Was this review helpful?

Thanks to NetGalley and Penguin Books UK for this Advanced Review Copy.

The title, cover, and description all intrigued me, and I was delighted to receive a review copy of this book. While I expected a dark read, I hadn’t expected to be quite so heavy or brutal. For certain, major triggger warnings are needed for this book, for which at present there are none. The narrative deals with domestic abuse, physical and sexual child abuse, and adult rape. The descriptions are graphic and occur numerous times.

To be honest, I struggled to connect, and therefore, root for either main character—Jenny and Laura—despite their respective traumas. I did, however, love Niamh, who really came alive for me.

“Inside, my mouth is jammed and crammed with blood and teeth and jagged helps that can’t get out.” … This opening line gives a good sense of where the book goes from here. We have a young girl found on the street covered in blood. Topically, there are no CAMHS beds available, so poor Jenny ends up on an adult psych ward while she waits for the doctors, social services, and the police to assess and interview her. Problematical, is the fact that the lead detective, Laura, has issues of her own, and her long battled and buried PTSD is no longer happy to stay quiescent.

One huge annoyance for me, and a thing which yanked me out of the read over and over and over again, was the use of ‘literally’. More than a few times, I wanted to throw my ereader across the room … literally!! Ugh. Aside from this, some lines stood out wonderfully, such as …

“She goes back into her silence, shrugging it over her shoulders like a coat.”

And …

“He nodded—the pissed-off nod rather than the friendly one.”

And …

“But that’s the problem. Time is running out and truth is running in.”

I believe this novel will be a marmite read for many, in that they’ll either love it or they’ll hate it, with not many on the fence. Having said that, I kind of AM on the fence about it. On one hand, the book covers some difficult yet essential issues. On the other, the characterisation fell flat for me. Furthermore, I found myself disbelieving the neat and tidy ending. I’m certain more consequences would have befallen Laura, and I’m not at all sure that four months would have seen such a remarkable improvement in poor Jenny. So, all in all, it’s an okay read. I loved some parts and hated others. It gets 3 stars from me, which means if you can handle the heavy, give it a go. You might just love it.


***

NOTE ON RATINGS: I consider a 3-star rating a positive review. Picky about which books I give 5 stars to, I reserve this highest rating for the stories I find stunning and which moved me.



5 STARS: IT WAS AMAZING! I COULD NOT PUT IT DOWN! — Highly Recommended.

4 STARS: I WOULD PULL AN ALL-NIGHTER — Go read this book.

3 STARS: IT WAS GOOD! — An okay read. Didn’t love it. Didn’t hate it.

2 STARS: I MAY HAVE LIKED A FEW THINGS —Lacking in some areas: writing, characterisation, and/or problematic plot lines.

1 STAR: NOT MY CUP OF TEA —Lots of issues with this book.

Was this review helpful?

Set in Ireland, the story follows the relationship between Jenny, a traumatised 14-year-old girl, and Laura, the victim support officer sent to interview her. As the interviews progress, Laura learns as much about herself as she does about Jenny. Good for readers looking for a different approach to the police procedural genre.
With thanks to the author, publisher and NetGalley for the opportunity to read an early copy in exchange for an independent review.

Was this review helpful?

A slow start that gradually picked up pace. This book tackled some very difficult subjects, I do feel this could be a trigger causing a difficult read for many. It’s actually a very sad story and at times reads as though it’s true.

Thanks to NetGalley and the publishers for the ARC in return for an honest and unbiased opinion.

Was this review helpful?

Woah there! This book will grab you by the bits and not let go, very dark in places and covers some very difficult issues but it was also a seriously good read and one you do not want to miss this year! A brilliant effort from the author and I’d love to see more from them as soon as possible!!!! Top class thriller

Was this review helpful?

Jenny, a fourteen year old found covered in blood and traumatised. Her mother and younger brother are badly hurt but her stepfather is missing. Two Garda, Laura and Niamh, must interview her. But it has an affect on Laura.

It’s a well written but, at times, hard to read book. It covers some very dark issues.

Was this review helpful?