![]() I actually found this one to be a bit more believable in terms of the way her addiction played out, and while it could have been just the same plot re-hashed, it definitely didn't feel that way to me. This is the follow-up to Crank and I was a bit skeptical as to how it would play out, since at the end of the first she had supposedly quit the habit. I've never read anything like this before and I am hooked. The tale is disturbingly beautiful, emotionally jarring, and elaborately constructed. She's able to construct a linear narrative out of a series of concrete poems where readers become entangled in all of Kristina'a dilemmas. Readers can't help sympathizing with her regardless of all of the messed up choices she's made.Īs with the first book, I was mesmerized at Hopkins' narrative. The story is sad she becomes embroiled in dealing meth and and contemplates prostitution. ![]() Juggling several "boyfriends" at a time, Kristina recognizes that what she's doing in wrong, but is reactive as opposed to being proactive in terms of her addiction. After being kicked out of her house and denied access to her son, she finds herself at the mercy of the monster. In this follow-up to Kristina's sordid tale, she continues to chronicle her life with the monster (crystal meth). After I finished Crank, I practically sped my way to Barnes and Noble go get this book, the second in the series. ![]()
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