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The Resemblance

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Member Reviews

The Resemblance by Lauren Nossett is the author's debut novel. I will read more by this author. The author really shows how power and money can make people greedy. I enjoyed getting to know the characters and liked the author's writing style (it held my interest). The university setting was great. The storyline is captivating, and the reader gets a glimpse into Greek life in college.

I would recommend this author and this book. I give it a 4 out of 5 stars.

#NetGalley @Flatironbooks

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LOVED this one. It's such a page turner and while I wouldn't say it's "fast paced" it's such a well done slow burn. And it was more believable that way, while STILL having twists and turns until the very end. If you're someone who has been impacted by greek life/fraternities in a negative way, this one might be hard for you. The author explores their dark side with no apologies and the main character (who I loved, major Mare of Eastown vibes) is ruthless in the pursuit to take them down and expose them. As someone who is often disgusted by that culture, I loved this book. Amazing debut novel!

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I was so excited when I was approved for this arc and it did not disappoint!
I loved the college atmosphere and the plot super interesting. It kept me invested from beginning to end!

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What a wonderful read. The Resemblance by Lauren Nossett:

Marlitt Kaplan is a detective that is on a mission to find a hit and run driver that struck dead Jay Kemp, a student at the University of GA while at a crosswalk. With a mission to find the driver of the car, Marlitt also has a deep pain from the past that haunts her so she feels the need to expose a fraternity that Jay was a part of. In the process Marlitt is attacked which left fascial scars but that does not stop her from trying to expose this fraternity's secrets. Marlitt finds out some of her own family secrets along the way that has answered a lot of her lingering questions.

This is a new author for me and I have thoroughly enjoyed this read. Thank you FlatIron books and Lauren Nossett for the advance digital copy for my honest review.

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Oh my gosh, my new favorite hero! Marlitt Kaplan is a university drop out, daughter of a professor and police detective skating on thin ice with her boss. When a frat brother is killed in a hit and run at the University of Georgia, she grabs the case immediately hoping to reinsert herself into her job and the good graces of her boss.

The driver cannot be identified, but he resembled the murdered fraternity brother and seemed to be driving his car. What can this all mean? Add in a. frat with many secrets to hide, a powerful university president and some internal police politics and you have a fast moving, complex police procedural that you will not solve until the end! I hope, hope, hope that this isn't the end of Marlitt, Lauren Nossett's debut book was amazing! If you like police procedurals, academic-based mysteries, complex and strong female heroines,n The Resemblance is for you! Thank you Lauren Nossett for making me fall in love with police novels again!
#Flatironbooks #TheResemblance #LaurenNossett #NetGalley

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The Resemblance
⭐️⭐️⭐️.5
Genre: Thriller
Format: Kindle eBook
Date Published: 11/8/22
Author: Lauren Nossett
Publisher: Flatiron Books
Pages: 320
Goodreads Rating: 3.99

I requested a digital advanced readers copy from NetGalley and Flatiron Books and providing my opinion voluntarily and unbiased.

Synopsis: A fraternity brother steps off a busy crosswalk and is struck dead by an oncoming car. More than a dozen witnesses all agree on two things: the driver looked identical to the victim, and he was smiling. Detective Marlitt Kaplan is first on the scene. In the course of investigating this hit-and-run, she will uncover more chilling secrets as she explores the sprawling, interconnected Greek system that entertains and delights the university’s most elite and connected students. When threats against her escalate, and some long-buried secrets threaten to come to the surface, she can’t help questioning whether the corruption in Athens has run off campus and into the force and how far these brotherhoods will go to protect their own.

My Thoughts: What initially drew me to this book was the cover, it is so mesmerizing. For this being Nossett’s first debut fiction work, it was amazing. I really fell in love with Marlitt and was transported into her world, riding along on this investigation. The premise of this plot was fantastic, money makes people powerful, and power makes people greedy, selfish, and deceitful. The old adage rings true that money can make any issue go away. The story is a slow builder, but at the same time, a page turner, with an explosion of an ending. The characters were well developed with depth, they were mysterious, creative, and likable, as well as relatable. The author’s writing style was complex, suspenseful, twisty, and kept me engaged from cover to cover. This book publishes later this year and this is one that I would preorder as it is sure to be a highly anticipated novel.

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Nossett's fictional debut shows just how dangerous it can be for college students to try to fit in with a fraternity.
Thank you Flatiron for the Advanced review copy.

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Combine a college university setting with a police procedural and you’ve got this book! I don’t seem to tire of either theme and was pulled in by the setting and the uniqueness of the main character.

I felt that the writer created an atmosphere beyond the word descriptions. Introspective and slightly melancholy, there was an unexpected emotional flavor that I couldn’t identify but appreciated.

My only issue is that the story veered off on numerous tangents and lessened the impact of other promising aspects.

Thank you to Flatiron Books, NetGalley, and Harriet Nosset for my electronic advance review copy. Due to be published on November 8, 2022.

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The Resemblance, by Lauren Nosset, is a police procedural that focuses on the hit and run death of a Fraternity brother at the University of Georgia. Detective Marlitt Kaplan, who doesn’t hold Greek life in very high esteem, obsessively immerses herself into the investigation, which is complicated by the fact that all witnesses agree that the driver and the victim appear to be the same person.

Campus Greek life, with its elitism, secrecy, and rituals, is a popular, but satisfying plot line, and I always find them fascinating. This story was intriguing and kept me interested in finding out if my theory was correct. I was partially correct, and left feeling like I still have some unanswered questions.

There was a random side story going on throughout the book and it’s is explained in the end; however, it wasn’t necessary to move the main story along and while it does tie in with the central theme of brotherhood, I’m still a bit puzzled by its inclusion, so I might have to think on it a little more.

Overall, this was a good read. I’m a big fan of campus thrillers, especially twisty ones with secrets and rituals, so I was pretty excited about this book, and it delivered. I’m always game to read a campus thriller and this one definitely didn’t disappoint.

Thanks to NetGalley and Flatiron for the opportunity to read this book in exchange for my honest review

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While I thought that the premise of this book was interesting, I felt as though it was a tad too long and I really couldn’t connect with any of the characters. Marlitt kept doing things that were wrong and I didn’t not feel the sympathy for her that I think I was supposed to when she got in trouble for it. The mystery was confusing, and while I enjoyed the solution once we got to it, I didn’t totally love the action of getting there. Overall an interesting premise, but I wasn’t always desperate to know what happened next.

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Marlitt is a detective who is the first to arrive on the scene of a hit and run accident, or was it truly an accident? That’s what she needs to figure out. I really enjoyed this story! I couldn’t put it down; I was invested from the beginning!

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When I began The Resemblance, I was hooked. The mystery was thrilling, the characters were well written and the southern setting felt close to home. As the story went on however I began to see some cracks and the twist made sure that I did not love this book and honestly ruined the story for me.

The reason to like this book is Lauren Nossett and her ability to tee up a compelling mystery and I felt that the wind up was superb but the actual finish ruined the enjoyment and made me dislike the story.

As someone who dropped out of a frat due to a toxic environment, the commentary on Greek Life was good and probably the strongest part of the book besides the characters and by the end I only cared about out lead character Marlitt and even she was beginning to become unlikeable.

Overall I feel like The Resemblance was a cool setup that crashed and burned in the end and wasted some great potential overall.

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What started off as reminiscent of part single white female/part animal house quickly shifted into a murder mystery, heavy on the feeling of loss throughout.

We follow detectives as they try to uncover both a killer and a motive in the death of a supposedly beloved fraternity brother, Jay. Everyone gets more than they bargained for as secrets unfold and you can’t help but feel for humanity in the end. The way we as a society handle crime and status, family pressures, and how we cope internally with feelings of emptiness.

Nossett nourishes this story with emotions that make up the backbone of it all. The bad guys aren’t just bad guys, there are backstories and responsibilities of others at play here. Stories to be told and she brings life to this genre.

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I enjoyed this book. I’ve never been a part of the Greek system, and I liked getting a sneak peek into fraternity life.

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I was quite bored with this book. I kept waiting for something to happen, but it never did.

This book also felt like the author is trying to set it up to be a series, but didn't really know how to go about doing it. A backstory was trying to be built, but the information was just being thrown at the reader with no real context.

DISCLAIMER: I was never involved in Greek life in college.
With this in mind, I did feel like the author had a personal vendetta against Greek life, and while some of the negative things may be true, it felt like an unnecessary overgeneralization.

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This was a very quick read and I would read more by this author, especially if it's set at UGA. I'm a UGA grad and could easily picture the places in the book which probably made it more enjoyable that it would be for other readers.

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This book was a fairly quick and easy read and I liked the main character’s narration. Sometimes I find detective books a bit tedious when there’s too much extraneous information, but this one had just enough info to keep with the plot. However, once we finally figured out the mystery it just felt a bit lacking after all of the build up and I was struggling a bit to follow the “why” of it all. Additionally (spoiler?) the reason for how the main character knew German felt like it could have been eliminated from the plot entirely.

Overall enjoyable, and I would read other books by this author. Thank you to NetGalley for the ARC

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The Resemblance
Lauren Nossett
⭐️⭐️⭐️

Hmmm…. This book sure describes college life to this day…. Sororities, fraternities, death, blackmail…. But honestly I’m not really sure how I felt about this book. It was a good read but I felt they was a lot of parts that had to be re read to make sure I was understanding correctly….. Other than that it wasn’t horrible.

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Interesting book. The unraveling of the storyline really was great. I especially liked how stubborn the main character was. At times it annoyed me a bit, but there was no other way this story would have worked out so great if she was any other way. On the flip side: the sad part about this book was that the entire story line was completely believable and I didn’t think for any second it was far fetched. I don’t have any personal experience with Greek life in college, but I don’t doubt that this could/did happen somewhere.
Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for a copy of this book in exchange for my honest opinion.

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I thoroughly enjoyed this book. Great flow, interesting plot and characters. Enough suspense to keep me turning the pages trying to figure out the mystery. I’m very impressed that this is Lauren Nossett’s debut novel. I look forward to her future publications.

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