Reviews tagging 'Pedophilia'

This Body's Not Big Enough for Both of Us by Edgar Cantero

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adventurous dark funny medium-paced
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

Despite how dark and downright horrifying this book can be at times, This Body's Not Big Enough for Both of Us was, overall, astonishingly fun. 

Adrian and Zooey are conjoined twins. Except instead of having two torsos, or two heads coming out of one torso, or an abnormal number of limbs, or something like that, they share a body with two arms, two legs, and one head - perfectly normal to look at. They're two separate people sharing one body and one brain - Adrian has the left half, Zooey has the right. Adrian is pure calculation and logic, and Zooey is pure emotion and hedonism. And they hate each other. 

But together, they make a really good private eye. So when the police department calls them in to help an undercover cop prevent a gang war, they get in a little bit over their heads, especially since Adrian is actually trying to get things done and Zooey gets them in trouble by acting on impulses and feelings and never thinking things through. Zooey worked really well as as foil for Adrian, but I really liked him the best. Neither of them were exactly good people, but I related much more to Adrian's logic than Zooey's free-spiritedness. 

This book does get really dark. There's car crashes, guns, gory murders and injuries, questions of what exactly a minor child should do when she knows her father's a mobster and how to cope when the polar opposite sibling you hate shares your body, the trauma of growing up abandoned and medicalized because people think you're insane and having people see you as a medical curiosity or a dangerous maniac but never as a human being, Adrian's trauma of being asexual while Zooey is a nymphomaniac, and the question of whether the siblings trying to hurt each other counts as siblings fighting or self-harm. But despite all that, the writing style and Zooey's inability to be anything approaching serious, it manages to be mostly lighthearted and sometimes even laugh-out-loud funny. 

This book breaks the fourth wall a lot. In some ways it doesn't seem intentional, since Zooey is a little nuts anyway and seems to fully believe that she's the protagonist in a book. So like, sort-of fourth wall breaks. It fully leans into the wacky weirdness of two siblings who hate each other in one body, and was highly entertaining. It wasn't perfect by any stretch, but I thoroughly enjoyed it. 

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