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You

A novel

ebook
8 of 8 copies available
8 of 8 copies available
Take one man traveling down the highway.
Imagine him without mercy.
Call him the Traveler and fear him.
 
Take five girls who open the door to chaos and watch them run.
Put five kilos of heroin and a gun in their luggage.
Call them the Sweet Nightmares and fear them.
 
Take a father haunted by his past who never forgets a grudge.
Call him the Kingpin and don’t go near him.
 
All hurtle toward each other.
Full of revenge, they have no idea that
YOU
are watching them. 
 
It’s a late-summer night in Berlin and notorious criminal Ragnar Desche isn’t too happy. He’s just found his brother, Oskar, dead, frozen stiff and sitting in his home next to a swimming pool full of marijuana plants. Someone’s flooded the pool and stolen a Range Rover, but what’s worse is that Ragnar’s huge cache of drugs is missing—and he’s going to want it back.
           
Meanwhile, nearby, a group of teenage girls are out at the movies. Thinking about boys and worrying about acne, they notice that the prettiest member of their clique is missing. She hasn’t been seen for days, and the trouble she’s found herself in is about to set all of the girls on a collision course with the Desche gang and drag them into a fight for their lives—a fight that might turn out to be more evenly matched than it first appears.
           
A gritty, pulsating, psychological thriller told through the eyes of an enormous cast of characters, You is an audacious and unpredictable combination of pulp, pluck, and revenge.  
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 30, 2014
      Drvenkar’s second novel (after 2011’s Sorry) opens with a man known as “The Traveler” using a 1995 snowstorm to screen to murder 26 solitary drivers stalled on a German highway in 1995. This chilling account is rendered in the second person, as is the rest of the novel. The complex plot is confusing at first, but the primary story line involves Ragnar Desche, a ruthless career criminal, who is looking to recover drugs valued at about three million euros. He has already killed his brother, Oskar, who was holding the contraband for him in Berlin—his teenage niece, Taja, eventually implicated in the crime. With the help of her “blood sisters”—Stink, Nessi, Schnappi, and Ruth—Taja tries to sell the drugs so she can find her mother in Norway. But what they find instead is Ragnar and his crew, on their tails in a violent and disturbing chase. Readers might question the narrative strategy of the second person voice, and they might wonder about how the various plotlines coalesce, but Drvenkar smartly ties everything up by the story’s end.

    • Library Journal

      June 15, 2014

      The relatively innocent lives of a group of teenage German girls will take a pronounced turn for the worse when one of their number needs help. Taja Desche, overdosing on a near-lethal cocktail of drugs after killing her father, Oskar, is somehow able to text friends Nessi, Ruth, Schnappi, and Stink for help. After Stink offers to sell five kilos of what turns out to be pure heroin found at the house to Oskar's nephew Darian, son of Ragnar Desche, a ruthless Berlin crime boss (whose goods these are in the first place), all hell breaks loose. Ragnar, Darian, and Ragnar's henchman pursue the girls from Berlin to Hamburg and finally to the shuttered family hotel in Norway for a climactic confrontation. Set against this narrative is the story of the Traveler, a mysterious and elusive serial killer responsible for a number of heinous crimes. VERDICT Told completely in the second person, with chapters alternating between differing characters' perspectives on the same events, this work is a dark thriller with an extremely high body count. While the novel's occasionally repugnant and often grisly action might seem designed to turn away the reader, Drvenkar accomplishes the rare feat of making this a gripping page-turner.--Lawrence Rungren, Andover, MA

      Copyright 2014 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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