Ah, so you’ve read The Fever, wonderful. I haven’t read that one yet and frankly, I’ve just read one of her novels, which I finished earlier today, but she is a pretty good writer and writes in a very intense manner, that’s why I recommend her. I’ve only read The End of Everything, an earlier novel of hers, but pretty good too. Well, more like just good, rather than very good, I suppose. I mean, it is very enjoyable and has a lot of twists and turns, but it mostly focuses on the themes that it explores rather than the mystery, which is not really too meticulous or complicated, so that’s why I may have enjoyed it less. It’s about two 13 year old girls, Lizzie and Evie, who have been best friends for as long as they can remember, they live next to one another, their families know each other and everything. They’re also both in awe of Evie’s older glamourous sister, Dusty. Then one day, after school, Evie disappears and is soon declared missing. Later, it’s speculated that she might have gotten into the car of Mr. Shaw, an older married man she has no apparent connection with. Lizzie searches for the truth and always has this uncanny feeling that she knows more than she thinks she does and the answer is in her memories. It explores themes of maturing and how some people romanticize the wrong things at times. The setting is a bit boring, I know, but it is an interesting piece of work. I hear The Fever is her best work yet though and I’m very much looking forward to reading that.