Cover Image: Such Pretty Flowers

Such Pretty Flowers

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Member Reviews

In Such Pretty Flowers, Dane is graduating college and moving in with his new girlfriend, Maura, a florist. Dane’s family begins to see that he may be dealing with some mental health challenges. However, weekly therapy does not prevent Dane from soon killing himself in a most unusual way. Holly, Dane’s sister, believes that Dane wasn’t suicidal and suspects Maura may have had something to do with his death. Despite having no clue what she is doing, Holly decides to investigate by getting close, really close to Maura.

Such Pretty Flowers is marketed as a modern Southern gothic, which it is. However, it frustrated me like a Mary Roberts Rinehart Had-I-But-Known plot. Could Holly be any stupider? Constantly taking huge risks for minimal payoffs isn’t brave, it’s just idiotic. Towards the end, I was hoping she would get killed just to take us both out of our misery. However, I realize that this opinion is solely my own so 3 stars for a well-written book that was just not for me.

Thanks to Bantam Books and NetGalley for a digital review copy of the book.

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Not gonna lie, I have no idea what to think about this one! There are so many aspects where it's mystifying that the main character Holly acted the way she did, but she was never ridiculous enough that it annoyed me to make me want to stop reading.

There was definitely something missing that i couldn't place my finger on, but not enough that I didn't enjoy it. Though lmao I did love the way the botany played a part in the ending.

Overall a very strange weird. Captivating but not my absolute fav.

Thank you very much to Bantam and NetGally for a chance to read and review!

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Trigger warning: suicide, mental health conditions

When Holly's brother Dane completes suicide, Holly and her family are left stunned. He seemed to go from a happy college student to a severely depressed young man in a matter of months, and Holly can't help but feel like his girlfriend, Maura is somehow to blame. Right before his death, Dane texted Holly some weird messages saying that Maura wanted to "play a game," and that "something was growing inside him." But as Holly begins to investigate Maura and ingratiate herself into her world, she finds herself becoming both obsessed and frightened by her brother's former girlfriend, a florist who specializes in strong, sometimes dangerous plants. Will Holly be able to escape Maura's spell, or will she be her next victim?

This book was so fascinating and original, with a spellbinding young florist being the main focus of the thriller. Maura is a mystery and it was such a great ride as we watched Holly trying to unravel the puzzle that is Maura as well as figure out what happened to her brother. It was an amazing complex puzzle that was filled with twists and turns. I finished this book in like two days because I was just so hooked on figuring out what was going on.

And the ending is just insane! It was so original and unique! I loved the concept, and I don't want to spoil it so I'll keep my mouth shut about it. But it was truly unique, which I appreciated.

Also, the author played the "relationship" super well. It would have been super awkward to have Holly just start a relationship with her dead brother's ex (and she mentions this), but her draw to Maura is undeniable so the author creates this tension, which just rows, even as Holly becomes frightened of her. It's an obsession and a repulsion pulling her both ways. It's written really well.

Overall, this book was really intense and interesting. I recommend it to anyone looking for an interesting thriller with some unique qualities.

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Have you ever fallen for someone you shouldn’t have? What if it was your brothers fiancé? Even worse what if your brother had died upon mysterious circumstances and you still fell for his fiancé?

In this one our main character falls for her dead brothers fiancé and mysterious things to start to happen. This one was recommended by both Layne Fargo and Gillian Flynn and other then that I haven’t seen it around much, but I knew I had to give it a shot.

It’s classified as being thriller/mystery/gothic/horror and I can def see why it was put in those categories. It was def a unique read, or in my case a unique listen. It kind of reminded me of a Blumhouse horror movie. Kind of weird, but also kind of intriguing. I would love to see this get adapted by them or Netflix into a movie.

@britpressley was the narrator in this one and did a phenomenal job. I don’t want to give anything away, but if you are looking for a unique read with queer representation and a twist of horror and gothic vibes def check this one out!

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Such Pretty Flowers had beautiful and exquisite writing and was an eerie gothic and mesmerizing tale that was hard to put down. Overall, a unique, queer story that I would recommend to those who love gothic horror.

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Such Pretty Flowers is seriously a spine chilling tale and will sit with me for quite sometime going forward. Holly's brother dies by what they say is "suicide", she becomes instantly suspicious and even suspects his girlfriend. Several events unfold and it eventually escalates into holly falling for her - who saw that coming? I found myself questioning everything that I was learning along the way. I very highly recommend this one.

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I've been inching into horror just a little bit. But not gory horror, more psychological will mess you up if you think about it too long horror. I have to admit I fell for the cover before the plot on this one but holy moly, this was such a ride.

Set in Savannah, the story focuses on our main character Holly who has just lost her brother to suicide. All Holly knows is that her brother sent her a cryptic text and hours later, he was dead. When Holly sees her brother's ex at the funeral, she starts to hatch a plan to find out what really happened and works at getting to know the ex, Maura more and more. The more she gets into Maura's life, the more she finds out and the creepier the book gets until everything comes to a head at the climax.

I thought K.L. Cerra did such a great job at making the discomfort creep up on the reader. One minute I was fine, the next, I needed a security blanket and stuffed animal just to make it through. It was such a good read. I wish it had come with some content warnings but I'm sure they are out there, I just didn't look for them.

Such Pretty Flowers is out now wherever you buy books. 3.5 stars.

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𝑻𝒉𝒆𝒏 𝑴𝒂𝒖𝒓𝒂 𝒇𝒍𝒊𝒄𝒌𝒆𝒅 𝒉𝒆𝒓 𝒆𝒚𝒆𝒔 𝒖𝒑 𝒂𝒕 𝒎𝒆. 𝑺𝒂𝒘 𝒎𝒆. 𝑰𝒕 𝒎𝒂𝒅𝒆 𝒎𝒆 𝒇𝒆𝒆𝒍 𝒏𝒂𝒌𝒆𝒅, 𝒎𝒚 𝒆𝒗𝒆𝒓𝒚 𝒕𝒉𝒐𝒖𝒈𝒉𝒕 𝒆𝒙𝒑𝒐𝒔𝒆𝒅, 𝒂𝒏𝒅 𝒎𝒚 𝒕𝒉𝒓𝒐𝒂𝒕 𝒄𝒍𝒐𝒔𝒆𝒅 𝒊𝒏 𝒓𝒆𝒔𝒑𝒐𝒏𝒔𝒆.

(tw: suicide) Holly’s younger brother Dane took his own life in a brutal and tragic way, only months after moving in with his new girlfriend. Holly thinks something is off with his girlfriend, Maura. After the opportunity presents itself when her roommate plans to move out, Holly moves in with Maura so she could investigate and stalk her. But she’s in over her head, and she might not find a way out.

This was such an eerie, atmospheric read. The writing style was beautiful, and it made Savannah, GA and the flowers come to life. The descriptions and prose was fascinating. The storyline and plot was unique, and it reminded me of Bunny by Mona Awad in the best ways.

Holly is a determined main character. Even when she got distracted from her goal, she always found herself right back on track. Maura is very interesting, and she’s written amazingly as a master manipulator.

Overall, I enjoyed the creepy, Southern Gothic vibes, the queer elements, and the original concept.

Thank you to Netgalley and Random House Publishing Group for the ARC of this. My thoughts are my own.

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This was a really engaging thriller and as someone who has read a lot of thrillers, it’s typically hard to impress me! I really enjoyed that we weren’t waiting for a twist ending, but existing in the tension of wtf Maura was up to and why. I’ve read reviews that other readers didn’t like Holly and hated how she behaved, but that was the part of the story I most enjoyed. People stricken by grief and anxiety often don’t make logical choices. Holly is proof that people do crazy things when they are hurting. I loved the botanical elements as a garden nerd and just generally thought the entire concept was really well done!
Also, the text from Dane saying “GET IT OUT OF ME” in chapter one was the ultimate hook. Such a great way to draw readers in.

Thank you to NetGalley, K. L Cerra, and Bantam for this ARC in exchange for my honest review.

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A dark and gothic thriller that had so much more to it than your typical popcorn mystery. I loved the story and the characters, despite themselves.

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Such pretty flowers, such a pretty city, and yet this is such an underwhelming book in almost every way.

If you’re looking for something original, this isn’t it. If you’re looking for something unpredictable, this most certainly isn’t it, because you can practically draw a map to the ending from around the 20% mark (AKA the point in the book where the protagonist “accepts the call to adventure”) and you will likely not be too far off the mark at any point in time. If you’re looking for something lgbtq-friendly, then I’m sorry to disappoint you there, again, because while it’s not homophobic, I am calling this book and the author out on using the attraction between lead characters Holly and Maura as titillation and not as something authentic. And if you’re looking for that lush, southern gothic thriller, I’m going to have to say again: NO. This isn’t that kind of book either. It sure wants to be, but it never quite reaches that level of atmosphere.

I can tell you I was immensely impressed with the general idea of the book, and with the amount of research author K. L. Cerra must have put into it for it to be so detailed when it comes to toxins, poisons, flowers, herbs, teas, tinctures, and more. Botany isn’t an easy science, and toxicology isn’t one either. Bring them together and you’ve got one of my favorite pet subjects, but that doesn’t mean it’s easy to understand.

This is K. L. Cerra’s debut novel, and I can see she has the bones in there to write great novels. She’s got ambition and she’s got direction. She’s obviously got drive. All it will take is some workshopping and a great support team who will keep her from going with the flow and instead encourage her to try the path less traveled when it comes to books like these for her to craft better novels. I look forward to seeing a better effort in the future.

I was provided a copy of this novel by NetGalley and Bantam. All views and opinions expressed in this review are mine and mine alone. Thank you.

Due to the 3 star or lower rating this review will not appear on any social media or bookseller websites. This is a personal policy.

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Southern Gothic Horror… Almost.

When Holly's brother Dane dies in a sudden and violent way, the police rule his death a suicide brought on by his deteriorating mental health. Holly knows that Dane was struggling in the months leading up to his death, but she's positive that there was more than just mental health issues at play. Plus there is just something sinister yet mesmerizing about his girlfriend Maura, she can’t put her finger on it but she knows she was involved somehow…

The book is set in Savannah Georgia, in a gorgeous old townhouse in the heart of the city that is possibly haunted? It’s feels like a massive missed opportunity to not use the existing lore of one of the most haunted cities in country. To not explore more of the hidden sinister side of Savannah’s high society which is only sort of alluded to, and if I can be perfectly honest… it was too into the flowers!!

The ending was kind of anticlimactic to me and I would have liked it more if a ghost or some other paranormal entity was at work. Pure horror would have worked better than the sort of convoluted and very plant based explanation we get.

Thank you Netgalley and Random House Ballantine for the review copy!

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Such Pretty Flowers is a captivating, compelling, and utterly original psychological suspense that ensnared me from the first page and kept me enthralled until the last. Cerra's masterful plotting and confident narrative style control her readers as expertly as her antagonist controls their victims.

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Creepy, trippy, emotional, intense, twisty and suspenseful, this gripping read sinks its claws in deep and lingers like a haunting ghoul in your mind even when you have no other option but to put it down because life intervenes. Very original and probably not for every reader but as for myself, I enjoyed it.

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Book Summary:

Holly's entire world is changed from the moment she learns of her brother's death – an apparent suicide. He had been dealing with mental health concerns, so this wasn't as shocking as it might have been. There's only one problem – the last text he sent her right before he died:

"Get it out of me."

In a fit of determination, Holly decides to get closer to Dane's fiance. After all, she was likely the one to do something to Dane if something nefarious was going on. The problem with this plan is that Holly has now put herself precisely in Dane's previous position: imminent danger.

My Review:

Oh wow. On the one hand, I can totally see why people are gushing about Such Pretty Flowers. It's got everything – gothic horror vibes, body horror elements, an air of mystery, and a promise of LGBT characters.

Only this book hits hard. Perhaps a little too hard for me. It made me want to keep my distance from the plot, even as I worked through it. I had theories from the beginning, and I'm sure every other reader will, which was enough to keep me invested until the end.

The thing I loved the most about Such Pretty Flowers has to be the setting. There are some serious horror aesthetics going on, and it is lovely. From the first page, it feels like you've been dumped face-first into a horror tale – and you have. Thankfully not literally. No, thank you.

Highlights:
Gothic Horror
LGBT+
Aesthetics

Trigger Warnings:
Suicide
Mental Health Concerns
Body Horror

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**3.5-stars rounded up**

'Get it out of me.'

That was the last text Holly ever received from her brother, Dane. She was out with friends, dancing, drinking, living it up. Her brother was ending his life. Holly is overwhelmed with grief and guilt in the days following the discovery of Dane's mutilated body. She knew he was struggling with his mental health. She feels guilty for not being more available to him.

Running through events in her mind, Dane's tumultuous last months, Holly begins to suspect that his suicide isn't as straight-forward as everyone believes. Seeing her brother's mysterious and beautiful girlfriend, Maura, at his funeral does nothing to quell those fears either.

In fact, it only makes her suspicions grow.

Determined to figure out the truth behind Dane's tragic death, Holly sets out to learn more about Maura and her relationship with Dane. Holly befriends the younger woman and before long, circumstances allow them to spend a lot more time together. That's when things begin to get weird; really weird.

Maura is a very successful florist in the Savannah area. She owns a gorgeous home, she's so put together, but she's also creepy as heck. At first, Holly is drawn to her, attracted to her, but she's also scared of her and she can't quite pinpoint why. As their relationship grows, Holly begins to fear that she could turn out just like Dane if she's not careful.

Compelling, addicting, eerie and creepy are just a few of the adjectives I would use to describe Such Pretty Flowers. Anddddd while it wasn't perfect, it definitely got my anxiety up and kept me glued to the pages!

I went into this under the mistaken idea that this was a YA-story, but it's definitely not. It's got more of a New Adult vibe. It gets pretty dark and graphic, even including some body horror, which I always enjoy. I was here for it. It was also super suspenseful. You can tell that there is something going on with Maura. It was so interesting trying to figure out what. It also gets pretty stressful and intense, like in a Single White Female kind of way.

It's like one of those intense feelings where you just want to shake the protagonist. Like, why are you making these crazy decisions, just get out of there!! Holly was determined though. She tried so hard not to let silly fears overwhelm her, even when they didn't seem quite so silly. Maura was just a girl, younger than her even, she had no reason to be intimidated by her...right?

Overall, I found this to be a clever and compelling work of Dark Fiction. There were a few areas that could have been explored a bit more, in my opinion, but I feel like this is still a solid, engaging story.

Thank you to the publisher, Bantam, for providing me with a copy to read and review. I had a lot of fun with it and look forward to reading more from this author.

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Such Pretty Flowers is a mystery with Mexican Gothic vibes set in a fancy townhouse in Savannah, Georgia.

Holly is a floundering twentysomething woman in Savannah at a crossroads in a pretty directionless life. Her roommates are newly engaged and talking about getting their own place when they think she can't overhear, so she's about to be homeless. Her job at the library is uninspiring. She's not close to her parents and doesn't have close friends beyond her brother, who distanced himself after moving in with his fiancée, Maura. Maura is everything Holly isn't: posh, seductive, and mysterious, she's a florist with a ritzy inner circle and a fancy townhouse in an affluent neighborhood far from where Holly grew up. After her brother commits suicide in a horrific manner, Holly feels guilty for not answering his final, cryptic text message and decides to investigate by faking friendship with her almost in-law as a way to get into her house and snoop through his things. But as Maura and Holly get closer, Holly starts losing control over her life and her reality, ultimately discovering secrets that could end up as dangerous for her as they were for her brother.

Such Pretty Flowers is sultry Southern Gothic tale that reminds the reader of the sweet scent of flowers at a funeral. K. L. Cerra does a fantastic job building suspense and mystery throughout the book in waves that make you wonder if the narrator is losing her grip on reality as the story progresses. It's also such an accurate portrayal of a toxic, emotionally abusive relationship with a gaslighting narcissist that I wanted to yell at the protagonist to just GET OUT. Cerra doesn't pull any punches with the creep factor, and I thought about this book for a long time after I finished it.

The main characters aren't terribly likeable; they're both self-centered and shallow in their own ways, which made it harder for me to get lost in the story, but that's very much a personal preference. I thought Such Pretty Flowers was well written and disturbing, so if you're into a good gothic mystery with a hothouse flower murder vibe, this book is for you.

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Holly's brother Dane has struggled with mental illness for a long time, but it is still a shock to her and her parents when they get the phone call that Dane has committed suicide. Holly immediately suspects that Dane's girlfriend might have had something to do with it. With a degree in botany and a thriving floral business, Maura certainly would have the knowlege and access to many plants. In order to find out the secrets that Maura is hiding about Dane's suicide, Holly moves in with her, getting more deeply entangled than she plans. Is Maura just a grieving girlfriend, or is Holly right? And can Holly figure it before she, too, ends up 6 feet under?

Holy cats, I LOVED this book. It's billed as southern gothic, and it is southern gothic af. A mysterious townhouse full of what seems to be poisonous, deadly plants, including black roses that seem to feed on blood, a cellar with a secret tunnel, strange dinner parties with even stranger guests, a mysterious Beauty and the Beast like dome filled with black roses. I mean, what more could you need? The townhouse has GARGOYLES!

I think Maura's relationship with her mother could have been explored a bit more thoroughly, and there was a plot point at the end that either needed to be expanded upon or just scrapped entirely (I don't know that it added much to the story, it was almost an offhand comment that made me go WAIT WHAT and then it was never mentioned again), but other than that I could not put this book down--I went to an unrelated author event and brought my kindle with me so I could keep reading while waiting in line for an autograph and honestly was disappointed when it was my turn to get my book autographed because I was at the top of the denoument and just needed to know what was going to happen!

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Such Pretty Flowers is a departure from what I normally read, but it definitely sucked me in!

Holly's younger brother Dane killed himself, and Holly can't forgive herself for not doing more. Dane had been suffering from mental illness, and Holly had distanced herself from him. However, the night he died, he sent her some strange texts, about his girlfriend Maura wanting him to play a strange game. In time, Holly becomes curious and tracks down Maura.

Holly doesn't trust Maura, but she is attracted to her, both physically and mentally. Maura is a florist, and an herbalist, and lives in a huge two-story townhouse with a library and a greenhouse. She invites Holly to move into her townhouse, which is amazing, since her current roommates are getting married and looking at condos themselves, and Holly can't resist the chance to get close to her to find out what she knows about Dane's death.

But the more she investigates, the weirder things seem. Dane had left her a few clues at the townhouse, but nothing is adding up. There are these strange black roses that seem to have their own energy source, and every time Maura gives her an herbal tincture to drink, she loses time and wakes up in her bed.

This book leaves you with a feeling of unease pretty much from page 1. I felt like screaming, "Run away! Don't open that door! Leave while you can!," just like I do when I watch a scary movie. However, the book's atmosphere isn't so oppressive that it makes the story hard to read. Instead, I found myself reading "just a few more pages" over and over again.

Thanks to Netgalley for the advance copy of this book.

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I think my favorite thing about this book were the descriptions. It’s filed under “gothic” on the PRHAudio app, and that’s exactly where the vaguely unsettling but also grand descriptions put it. It is a gothic book in pretty much every sense (assuming the classic definition of gothic literature): isolated character, gaslighting galore, eerie balance of opulence and decay, a weird fascination with terrible beauty (in this case deadly plants), and an unreliable narrator getting a run for her money.

For a modern audience though… Holly clocks all of the red flags that Maura throws up, waves at them, and then forges onwards. Maura’s act was a little too transparent for me as a reader to believe Holly would fall for. Once she got in too deep and there was no real escaping, that’s when things really worked for me, even if it was bananas.

There were a handful of things that never got explained - like Maura’s limp, for example. It was mentioned enough times that I figured it would be important (maybe just so that homegirl would struggle in a desperate chase?) but we never got a story behind it.

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