Skip to main content

A Lovely True Crime Time: Love in the Time of Serial Killers

I've always associated 'romance' books with the Catherine Cookson books my nan used to read in front of the TV, or the books I skim past in the 'free eBook' section of Kobo. As a queer woman, most heterosexual romance stories don't appeal, and even the queer romance I read tends to cross over with other genres. If I want romance, I usually read fanfiction, which is free and about pairings I care about.

But, the modern romance market is currently packed with self-aware, interesting titles, and one of them is this book: Love in the Time of Serial Killers (Alicia Thompson). I'm trying to be more open and less judgemental about my own reading, so I was willing to give it a go, especially since I am a millennial woman and therefore have a subscription to every true crime channel available to me.

Phoebe's having a hard time, and not in a cute romance book 'I got locked out in my pyjamas and my boss was a jerk to me!' way. In a 'my dad just died, I have to clean out his hoarder house so that it can be sold to cover his debts, I'm grieving but also processing how unhappy our relationship was, I'm also trying to connect with my baby brother who I barely know, I have no real friends, and I'm in the end stages of my PhD' way.

She's isolated and brittle, a feral cat that trusts no one and flees from affection. She's not looking for love, and when her meet-cute moment comes it's on her driveway at 2am and she's so alarmed that she drops and smashes her phone. Sam ('comma, Son of' as she mentally adds) is her neighbour; an extremely ordinary music teacher who goes around being well-adjusted and nice at her. The monster.

Phoebe doesn't *really* think he's a serial killer, it's just that suspecting people of being potential serial killers is more-or-less her worldview. If distrusting people was an Olympic sport, she'd be a champion several times over. That view starts to shake as more and more opportunities to put down roots arise.

She grows closer to her brother (engaged on a charming quest to propose to his girlfriend in a worthy-enough way), re-connects with a childhood BFF, comes into possession of a cat, and embarks of the first shaky steps towards a relationship. But she isn't sticking around for long, so is it even worth bothering?

I haven't heard much about this book, except one person mentioning that 'it's not really a romance' and an Audible review calling the main character 'horrendous' and 'unlikeable'. That's an unfair criticism for a book that is far more focused on character development than your average romance (and yes I have read some). This isn't a will-they-won't-they but a will-she-figure-herself-out story.

Phoebe is made up of contradictions - and she has an all-or-nothing personality. Her early interactions with Sam manage to be cringe but also funny (her presenting him with half a pie as a thank you, because a whole pie means 'she made him a pie' actually made me laugh out loud).

Frankly, considering the pressure she's under, she's doing well. The book doesn't ignore grief and the complications when the person you're grieving wasn't what they should have been. Her brother is seven years younger and lived apart from her, and her mother isn't emotionally available. And I've not done a PhD but I imagine it's somewhat stressful at the thesis writing stage - without even having to renovate a house at the same time.

The characters also talk and act like real people. There's no cutesy reference to The Simpsons to show how *into* pop-culture Phoebe is - instead her brother just quotes a random line (from Bart of Darkness) and she understands the reference because she's a thirty year old woman. She compares herself to Wednesday Addams at Camp Chippewa, reads fanfiction as a teenager, complains about JK Rowling being a TERF, and there are gifs with her messages. She's not implied to be a 'nerd' for it, even a 'Hollywood nerd' - her true nerd moments are when she's talking about story structure and POV in non-fiction crime books. 

This is also the first book I've read where the character is fat, and fine with it. Her body is just that - sometimes it annoys her (clothes shopping for blazers) and sometimes she's thrilled with how good her tits look. It's just a body she exists in, and she's not made out to be either unusually attractive or beautiful-but-she-doesn't-know-it. It was refreshing for a female character to care about her appearance an average amount.

Going back to the comment about it 'not being a real romance'... I think that person meant that it's far more focused on character than a standard romance. It's more Phoebe's story than Phoebe-and-Sam's. I was as invested in her re-friending her old bestie and staying near her brother as I was in her love story. I just wanted good things for her full stop.

As someone who got through grieving my (much loved, but not perfect) dad by falling into a true crime hole, and as someone who struggles with isolation and putting down roots, parts of this cut a little too close. There's a moment when Phoebe describes her childhood self getting a compliment on her necklace, loudly announcing that it only cost $5, and snapping it in half to prove it. It's the kind of cringe-y story that we can all understand on a soul level. 

Who doesn't want that dumb kid to get her happy ending?

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

FantasticLand is... Kinda Fantastic

It's not often I start a book that I know absolutely nothing about. I hadn't heard any buzz, it didn't appear on any book lists and I hadn't seen a single copy in a bookshop. The only thing it had going for it was that it appeared in the Audible Plus catalogue under 'horror' at the exact moment I was looking for a free horror audiobook. Mike Bockoven's FantasticLand is the story of a theme park roughly the same size as Disney World . Like Disney, it's a family institution with distinct themed 'lands' ( Pirate Cove, Fairy Prairie, Circus World , etc). The story begins with a record-breaking hurricane that takes out several states. Things begin well, with FantasticLand almost over-prepared . The park is quickly evacuated, leaving only three-hundred volunteers to stay in the bunkers and secure the park in the aftermath - for a significant pay bonus.  After poor management and a blackout leads to the first (seemingly) accidental fatalities, the now s...

70% Off EVERYTHING?? What Happened When I Went to a Book Trade Warehouse

I hate book hauls on YouTube, and tend to only watch a very few made by BookTubers I respect. They tend to be transparent about where the books come from and how much they've spent (and are more excited about the book contents than the prettiness of the design.)  I've never done one because a) I'm not a Bookfluencer, b) no one is sending me review copies/gifts, and c) I buy books regularly but cheaply, mainly in a digital format.  But on Saturday I went to 66Books Ltd , a London book warehouse selling to trade only. Once a month it opens to the public and book lovers arrive from far and wide to get brand new books at a 70% discount. I was assured that if I walked away with less than ten books I'd be the most iron-willed person on earth...  (Spoiler: I bought more than ten books.) So what was it like? And, most importantly, what is in my haul?   The Experience I am noted for my dislike of early mornings, crowds, and uncertainty, so waking up at seven on a Saturday an...

A Terrible Kindness Accidentally Told the Queer Story I'd Wanted for Years

I didn't read this book because it had queer content. Honest. In fact, I had no idea. I had only heard buzz about it and needed a book to fulfil the 'modern history' prompt for History Girl Summer. Couple that with the feeling of connection to the Aberfan disaster that every UK person has, I was sold.  What I wasn't expecting was for this book to (partially) tell a story I'd been yearning for my entire adult life.  A Terrible Kindness [Jo Browning Wroe] is about the impact of the Aberfan disaster on a man's life. The real-life disaster happened when a small Welsh village was devastated by a half-million tonne man-made avalanche. It primarily struck the village's school, leading to the death of one-hundred-and-sixteen children and twenty-eight adults.  In the aftermath, nearby undertakers are begged to come and assist with the body-identification and embalming process, and though it's a job more suited to those with disaster experience, newly-gra...