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The End of Everything

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From the award-winning author of The Turnout and Dare Me: a "mesmerizing psychological thriller" about a teenage girl who disappears during a 1980s suburban summer (Los Angeles Times).
Thirteen-year old Lizzie Hood and her next door neighbor Evie Verver are inseparable. They are best friends who swap bathing suits and field-hockey sticks, and share everything that's happened to them. Together they live in the shadow of Evie's glamorous older sister Dusty, who provides a window on the exotic, intoxicating possibilities of their own teenage horizons. To Lizzie, the Verver household, presided over by Evie's big-hearted father, is the world's most perfect place.
And then, one afternoon, Evie disappears. The only clue: a maroon sedan Lizzie spotted driving past the two girls earlier in the day. As a rabid, giddy panic spreads through the Midwestern suburban community, everyone looks to Lizzie for answers. Was Evie unhappy, troubled, upset? Had she mentioned being followed? Would she have gotten into the car of a stranger?
Lizzie takes up her own furtive pursuit of the truth, prowling nights through backyards, peering through windows, pushing herself to the dark center of Evie's world. Haunted by dreams of her lost friend and titillated by her own new power at the center of the disappearance, Lizzie uncovers secrets and lies that make her wonder if she knew her best friend at all.
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from May 30, 2011
      Fans of Tana French and Kate Atkinson will welcome Abbott's haunting psychological thriller set in what appears to be pre-cellphone suburban America. Lizzie Hood and Evie Verver are two 13-year-old girls who have been best friends for years. A few weeks before their eighth-grade graduation, Evie disappears after school. As the last person to see Evie, Lizzie suddenly becomes the star witness, attention she both covets and dreads. When Lizzie remembers seeing a maroon car cruising in front of their school, the police focus on Harold Shaw, an insurance agent whose car matches her description. Yet Shaw is nowhere to be found, and neither is Evie. As the investigation reaches a fever pitch and Lizzie pursues her own leads, she wonders how well she really knew her friend. Evie's boisterous, joke-cracking father lends emotional support. Abbott (Bury Me Deep) expertly captures the nuances of lost innocence and childhood friendships, without ever losing an undercurrent of menace.

    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2011

      Edgar Award–winning crime writer Abbott's sixth novel (Bury Me Deep, 2009, etc.) is a change of pace: a delicate skein of fantasies and obsessions, shared by two adolescent girls and shadowed by an abduction.

      Lizzie and Evie are thick as thieves. Next-door neighbors, they are tomboys who think nothing of getting banged up in a hockey game. The 13-year-olds are on the cusp of puberty, and all the revelations it will bring. Lizzie, the narrator, is fascinated by the Ververs. Aside from Evie, there is her older sister Dusty, impossibly beautiful and glamorous, and Mr. Verver, the most fun dad you could imagine. Lizzie's own dad has split after an ugly divorce. She has the feeling something momentous is coming, and then it does: Evie disappears. Lizzie recalls that Evie had a secret admirer, an older man who would watch her at night, standing in the yard. It doesn't take long to figure out that it's Mr. Shaw, a married middle-aged insurance agent, who has driven Evie away. (The location is Anyplace, U.S.A.) The crime element is handled perfunctorily. Abbott's spin on the situation is what's important: the possibility that Evie, a willing conspirator, wanted this attention from an older man. After all, thinks Lizzie, doesn't she have her own huge crush on Mr. Verver? And maybe Mr. Shaw was driven "by the purest, most painful love"? Abbott guides us skillfully through Lizzie's hothouse fantasies, but at the expense of action. There's a long wait for a break in the case. It comes awkwardly, casting Shaw's wife in an especially strange light. But it's engineered by Lizzie, who resorts to fibs as she dramatizes her role ("I feel so powerful, like a god"). The real drama, though, is next door at the Ververs. Right at the end, Dusty reveals a furious sibling rivalry, under the nose of the oblivious Mr. Verver. What do adults know? 

      A tangled tale that is more provocative than illuminating.

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Library Journal

      February 15, 2011

      Thirteen-year-old Lizzie's best friend has disappeared, and as family and police hunt for her, Lizzie finds herself the center of attention. That's scary--but also a little heady. Edgar Award winner Abbott should do well.

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      May 1, 2011
      Thirteen-year-old Lizzie has been best friends with her classmate, Evie Verver, forever. Now the drowsy, breathless haze of early sexuality is working its dark alchemy on them, though its working on Evie faster. More and more, Lizzie thinks, Evie isnt exactly Evie any longer. Then Evie vanishes. A few days later, Lizzie seizes upon a random memorya car that circled the block twiceto point the finger at a neighbor. While the police hunt for the abductor, Evie capitalizes on a long-dormant fantasy of becoming the supportive, grateful daughter the magnetic Mr. Verver never had. Lizzies dreamy, first-person narrative freely skips backward and forward through time, and her languid personal investigation into the crime has the same gliding, impulsive feel of everything else about girls of that age. She just does things, without good reason, on instincts that, though twisted, are true. Explanatory monologues weaken the closing chapters; nevertheless, Abbott, well-known as a hard-edged noir author (Bury Me Deep, 2009) has crafted a unique mystery lush with sensory details.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      June 1, 2011

      Thirteen-year-old Lizzie Hood is the last person to see her best friend, Evie, before she disappears. They've been inseparable for years, and Lizzie knows everything about her--or does she? Lizzie knows enough to pursue clues the police dismiss, but in all her reflections there are flashes of darker moments and unsettling questions. Her narration is full of quick glimpses of another story, just there on the edges, that create layers of suspense. Has Evie been abducted, or has her fierce older sister driven her to run away? Just how safe and perfect is the family next door? VERDICT Edgar Award winner Abbott (Queenpin) offers a fascinating twist on the coming-of-age story, blending a tale of young women just discovering their sexuality with suspense and plenty of plot twists. [See Prepub Alert, 1/17/11.]--Jan Blodgett, Davidson Coll., NC

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2011

      Edgar Award-winning crime writer Abbott's sixth novel (Bury Me Deep, 2009, etc.) is a change of pace: a delicate skein of fantasies and obsessions, shared by two adolescent girls and shadowed by an abduction.

      Lizzie and Evie are thick as thieves. Next-door neighbors, they are tomboys who think nothing of getting banged up in a hockey game. The 13-year-olds are on the cusp of puberty, and all the revelations it will bring. Lizzie, the narrator, is fascinated by the Ververs. Aside from Evie, there is her older sister Dusty, impossibly beautiful and glamorous, and Mr. Verver, the most fun dad you could imagine. Lizzie's own dad has split after an ugly divorce. She has the feeling something momentous is coming, and then it does: Evie disappears. Lizzie recalls that Evie had a secret admirer, an older man who would watch her at night, standing in the yard. It doesn't take long to figure out that it's Mr. Shaw, a married middle-aged insurance agent, who has driven Evie away. (The location is Anyplace, U.S.A.) The crime element is handled perfunctorily. Abbott's spin on the situation is what's important: the possibility that Evie, a willing conspirator, wanted this attention from an older man. After all, thinks Lizzie, doesn't she have her own huge crush on Mr. Verver? And maybe Mr. Shaw was driven "by the purest, most painful love"? Abbott guides us skillfully through Lizzie's hothouse fantasies, but at the expense of action. There's a long wait for a break in the case. It comes awkwardly, casting Shaw's wife in an especially strange light. But it's engineered by Lizzie, who resorts to fibs as she dramatizes her role ("I feel so powerful, like a god"). The real drama, though, is next door at the Ververs. Right at the end, Dusty reveals a furious sibling rivalry, under the nose of the oblivious Mr. Verver. What do adults know?

      A tangled tale that is more provocative than illuminating.

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
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  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.3
  • Interest Level:9-12(UG)
  • Text Difficulty:4

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