In seventh grade, Spencer, Emily, Aria and Hanna were all perfect. Now, keeping their perfection more than skin deep is becoming harder and harder.
Now, there is a stalker loose in there town. The possibilities for who it could be are endless. But there is only one person the ex- best friends think it is- "A"
"A" is getting inpatient with the girls. "A" now is concentrating on destroying their lives. And it's working.
Between "A", Ali's death and a leaked video of the girls, they seem to be stuck together in many of the same situations. But for Hanna, it's worst because her best friend, Mona, hates Spencer, Emily and Aria.
"A" is more determined than ever to make the girls lives as imperfect as "A" can get them.
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Seriously? That's how the book ends? I hate cliff hanger ending, especially when I had no intentions of reading the next one. It's great marketing to make it so you have to read the next one.
Finitely! The antagonist did something evil, not just threaten the protagonists. It made the book a whole lot more interesting and made "A" change a character- even though we still don't know who "A" is. Though I think I know who it.....
In the first two books, Hanna's plot was so boring. It this one, it actually was interesting. But Spencer's is really bad. If only all of the characters had good plots...
The suspense was used more for the characterization at not for the plot, which saved the characterization big time. It made the characters seem more real. The book could have used more emotion to make the characters seem more developed, but it made it so every reader had a different idea who the characters were, or what they were feeling. I liked that about the characters because it made you think; what would I be feeling if I went through that, but was this person?
The suspense was just for developing Hanna. The conflict was just for Emily. The emotion was just for Aria. The symbolism was just used for Spencer (but it wasn’t really good). I thought it was cool how many literacy devises the author used, but at the same time, it was like the author was in English class, trying to show everyone how many she could use. But, just like in English class, you’re going to get docked marks for using too much.
4.25 out of 5 stars.

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