You: a completely addictive serial killer thriller! Now a major Netflix series

· YOU series Book 1 · Simon and Schuster
4.2
169 reviews
Ebook
432
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About this ebook

*** NOW A MAJOR NETFLIX SERIES ***

'Thriller of the Year' 
Daily Mail 
'Hypnotic and scary' Stephen King
'Examines the fine line between seduction and stalking . . . Ludicrously readable' Guardian

When aspiring writer Guinevere Beck strides into the bookstore where Joe works, he is instantly smitten.

But there's more to Joe than Beck realises and much more to Beck than her perfect facade. And the obsessive relationship quickly spirals into a whirlwind of deadly consequences...

A chilling account of unrelenting, terrifying deceit, Caroline Kepnes' You is a thriller more perversely clever and dangerously twisted than any YOU have ever read.

'I am RIVETED, AGHAST, AROUSED, you name it. The rare instance when prose and plot are equally delicious' Lena Dunham 

Brilliant thriller with attitude, guts and true insight into the nature of obsession' Sophie Hannah

'A fantastically creepy thriller... The kind of book you put your life on hold for' Glamour

'Clever and chilling' Elle

'A brilliant tale… It's Gone Girl meets a sinister version of GirlsMarie Claire

'An addictive thriller!' Closer

Ratings and reviews

4.2
169 reviews
Ci'ara Ray
December 23, 2019
The book is really good, I finished it in a day. However I put it down after chapter 3 for an hour because the way the writer uses "and" was weird and off putting. However, the main character Joe is obsessive and probably would use "and" like that. After I got over that it was a thrilling read. It's almost nothing like the show, other than bits and pieces, which is nice because I got to see a different Beck and a different Joe. All in all I would recommend this book to friends that would enjoy it.
1 person found this review helpful
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Liani Nowell
September 22, 2016
I absoultely love the lead character and found the book to be not just intriguing for the plot itself but for the way that the writer seems to win you over to the side of the villain. I found it witty and sexy at times as well as sickening in a good way. Wonderful look into the head of a stalker, the writer painted him in both a wonderful and terrible light make you love and hate him all at once.
34 people found this review helpful
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Midge Odonnell
February 5, 2019
3.5 Stars This is a deeply disturbing book about the nature of obsession. If it had just been that Joe was strange stalker it would have been uncomfortable but for the object of his affections to be as damaged as he made it very disturbing if you stop and think about the themes generated in the story. Both the characters are fairly unpleasant people and have pretensions about themselves that you only really find in city dwelling students in their early 20s - life soon knocks a great deal of that out of you if you manage to escape academia. The narrative is all from Joe's point of view and the way he skews events to suit his own ego is absolutely horrifying - the true thought process of the psychopath. You soon realise that for Joe nothing is really there or real unless he is experiencing it and that he has the right to manipulate every event to his own ends and to fit his own agenda. I loved the way the author weaves Beck's narrative in to the tale by virtue of Joe monitoring her email conversations with friends. In some ways these two really do deserve each other, but when two narcissists collide it is never going to be pretty. As much as I enjoyed the book I had to think long and hard about how to rate it. You see, there are issues here - one of my main problems was the disposal of, what we learn is, Joe's second victim; it just isn't feasible for this to occur. Shamefully, I have also been swayed by popular opinion and started wondering if it was really as great as many are making it out to be. Truthfully, it is a very good book of the genre and details the pre-occupation of early twenty-somethings with their self image, how they gain validation from Social Media and how carnal pleasure is some sort of holy grail. Honestly, all the physicality didn't bother me - it sits right with the characters. However, as good as it may be I fear that this is through the "shock value" of the tale being told from the wrong side of this story. Usually we hear from the victim or the investigators with only a rare interjection from the criminal. I am also struggling with my mental comparisons with American Psycho (the film as I haven't read the book) as being a baseline that Joe is based on and finding him somehow lacking. On the whole this is a good, strong psychological thriller told from an unusual perspective - a perspective that does make you wonder how the author manages to get under the skin of someone so damaged.
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About the author

Caroline Kepnes is the author of You, Hidden Bodies, Providence and numerous short stories. Her work has been translated into a multitude of languages and inspired a television series adaptation of You, currently on Netflix. Kepnes graduated from Brown University and previously worked as a pop culture journalist for Entertainment Weekly and a TV writer for 7th Heaven and The Secret Life of the American Teenager. She grew up on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and now lives in Los Angeles.

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