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Customer reviews

3.9 out of 5 stars
3.9 out of 5
2,853 global ratings
5 star
40%
4 star
25%
3 star
20%
2 star
9%
1 star
5%
Bunny: A Novel

Bunny: A Novel

byMona Awad
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Top positive review

All positive reviews›
Ellen
4.0 out of 5 starsSO Weird But So Fantastic!
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 3, 2023
I'm sure you've heard about this very odd and very wicked book by now (it has over 80,000 Goodreads reviews!!) As 2022 drew to a close, was anxious to get to some of the books on my TBR, and this one was at the top of my list.

The first half of the book was everything I hoped for. Sarcastic, funny and so, so smart. Mona Awad is an extremely gifted writer.

I highlighted so many memorable passages. When the main character Samantha is observing her all-female creative writing cohort: "Their cheeks are plump and pink and shining like they've been eating too much sugar, but actually it's Gossip Glow, the flushed look that comes from throwing another woman under the bus.”

Ms. Awad delightfully skewers graduate fiction programs and I loved that part of the book. I also loved the wordplay on the name of the college: Warren. Samantha struggles mightily to get along with not only her pretentious professor, but also the other members of the highly-coveted creative writing program. ("My smile is fixed on my face, nailed there, though it jerks under the pins.")

When I reached the halfway mark, I thought to myself, oh okay, now I see where all the 1 and 2-star ratings came from. The story just gets WEIRD. But push though. I promise the payoff is worth it!

This book is reminiscent of 'Mean Girls' but on acid. I couldn’t even get angry at what seemed to be cruelty to animals because I think (?) some was fantasy. I was frustrated at Samantha being such a docile participant in the “Bunny” clique, but she really pulled it together in the end.

“I’ve never really not written, never not had another world of my own making to escape to, never known how to be in this world without most of my soul dreaming up and living in another. Until I came here.”

I really loved the conclusion and felt like it tied the whole story together. Overall I recommend this very inventive and strange book!
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2 people found this helpful

Top critical review

All critical reviews›
LTJ
2.0 out of 5 starsBunny is a weird and bizarre disappointment of a novel
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on April 12, 2022
“Bunny” by Mona Awad started off really interesting and then goes into some very weird uncharted waters. I see this is considered a horror novel but it has elements of fantasy that ends up just making things really confusing when events and situations start happening.

I personally didn’t mind it as it started to make me really engaged and excited to see where things were going. The problem is I started to notice that things started to get a bit boring with way too much dialogue that is repeated and not properly explained. I think if Awad spent more time explaining this whole bunny angle and putting a better horror twist on it, things could have gotten better as the novel progressed.

Unfortunately, the buildup to the ending felt really flat. I was expecting so much more and even in my head came up with a few scenarios that could have really turned this into a blockbuster of a novel. It started out really creepy, lost some momentum, picked up a bit, lost more momentum, got super interesting/weird, then lost even more momentum, and then the ending came and it was extremely lame. I literally had at least two scenarios for the ending that was significantly better than what ultimately ended up happening. I was left with a “THAT’S IT?!!?!?” moment once I finished and I hated it.

I felt the main protagonist, Samantha, was mostly a whiner from start to finish and the moments she could have redeemed herself never came. Every character with the exception of Ava and Max was uninteresting. I felt all the different “bunnies” made things even more confusing as they have nicknames, then real names, then they become interchanged so you start to forget who is who and just keep reading to see what happens because they’re too generic. Way too many pages dedicated to dialogue that didn’t really add anything when it mattered most and felt like it was rambling most of the time.

I give “Bunny” by Mona Awad a 2/5 as her writing style is great but things could have been scarier and fleshed out more to the point where this could have been a better horror novel. I didn’t even feel this was even a real horror novel and felt more like a young adult novel with a weird dark fantasy twist. The ending didn’t deliver as I thought it was and it’s a shame, I enjoyed reading this to a degree due to the curiosity of what the hell was going on but it went downhill quickly for me at around 70% on. Overall, I ended up being pretty disappointed with this one and am looking forward to my next read.
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7 people found this helpful

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From the United States

Ellen
4.0 out of 5 stars SO Weird But So Fantastic!
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 3, 2023
Verified Purchase
I'm sure you've heard about this very odd and very wicked book by now (it has over 80,000 Goodreads reviews!!) As 2022 drew to a close, was anxious to get to some of the books on my TBR, and this one was at the top of my list.

The first half of the book was everything I hoped for. Sarcastic, funny and so, so smart. Mona Awad is an extremely gifted writer.

I highlighted so many memorable passages. When the main character Samantha is observing her all-female creative writing cohort: "Their cheeks are plump and pink and shining like they've been eating too much sugar, but actually it's Gossip Glow, the flushed look that comes from throwing another woman under the bus.”

Ms. Awad delightfully skewers graduate fiction programs and I loved that part of the book. I also loved the wordplay on the name of the college: Warren. Samantha struggles mightily to get along with not only her pretentious professor, but also the other members of the highly-coveted creative writing program. ("My smile is fixed on my face, nailed there, though it jerks under the pins.")

When I reached the halfway mark, I thought to myself, oh okay, now I see where all the 1 and 2-star ratings came from. The story just gets WEIRD. But push though. I promise the payoff is worth it!

This book is reminiscent of 'Mean Girls' but on acid. I couldn’t even get angry at what seemed to be cruelty to animals because I think (?) some was fantasy. I was frustrated at Samantha being such a docile participant in the “Bunny” clique, but she really pulled it together in the end.

“I’ve never really not written, never not had another world of my own making to escape to, never known how to be in this world without most of my soul dreaming up and living in another. Until I came here.”

I really loved the conclusion and felt like it tied the whole story together. Overall I recommend this very inventive and strange book!
2 people found this helpful
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Aili Annuk
4.0 out of 5 stars Dark academia, magical realism and horror, can't go wrong!
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 1, 2022
Verified Purchase
Samantha is a MFA creative writing scholarship student in the elite Warren University. She doesn't seem to have anything in common with other students in her course, who are all from rich families, do everything together and for whatever the reasons - call each other Bunnies. One day she gets a surprising invitation to their creative get-together evening, Smut Salon. Soon enough Samantha has to question reality as she knows it. And you as a reader will follow shortly.

Well this was a bizarre book. It's funny, disorienting and a bit wild. There's dark academia, magical realism and horror. Naturally I loved it. I must say I had to think about the storyline for a few days after finishing. There's ways to interpret it I guess and I have my own theories. The writing is clever and everything has its place and meaning, even if it doesn't seem like that at first.You can read it as a crazy story without even analyzing the meaning and still get a kick out of it. I really don't know how to further review it without spoilers hmm.

⛔ SPOILERS AHEAD! ⛔

Was it even real? The whole of it, the making people out of bunnies part, the weird cult she was drawn into? Because, as we learned, Samantha had the ability to turn other animals into human beings, the other girls only could use rabbits. Her best friend, Ava, was unknowingly summoned alive from a swan. When Samantha started engaging more with the Bunny cult, Ava disappeared. And what happened during that time? She was given some sort of pills. It was never specified what kind of pills they were. She could have been a psych patient for all we know. And Max, who she also "made", took revenge on the bunnies. Ava and Max were like the opposite sides of Samantha's personality that were fighting her inner fights in the "real world". But it doesn't totally add up since she did witness making people out of rabbits during that time. Or was it all a psychotic episode? Or could we look at it as an outsider's view of the "normal" that seems incomprehensible to her? Such a weird story.
Customer image
Aili Annuk
4.0 out of 5 stars Dark academia, magical realism and horror, can't go wrong!
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 1, 2022
Samantha is a MFA creative writing scholarship student in the elite Warren University. She doesn't seem to have anything in common with other students in her course, who are all from rich families, do everything together and for whatever the reasons - call each other Bunnies. One day she gets a surprising invitation to their creative get-together evening, Smut Salon. Soon enough Samantha has to question reality as she knows it. And you as a reader will follow shortly.

Well this was a bizarre book. It's funny, disorienting and a bit wild. There's dark academia, magical realism and horror. Naturally I loved it. I must say I had to think about the storyline for a few days after finishing. There's ways to interpret it I guess and I have my own theories. The writing is clever and everything has its place and meaning, even if it doesn't seem like that at first.You can read it as a crazy story without even analyzing the meaning and still get a kick out of it. I really don't know how to further review it without spoilers hmm.

⛔ SPOILERS AHEAD! ⛔

Was it even real? The whole of it, the making people out of bunnies part, the weird cult she was drawn into? Because, as we learned, Samantha had the ability to turn other animals into human beings, the other girls only could use rabbits. Her best friend, Ava, was unknowingly summoned alive from a swan. When Samantha started engaging more with the Bunny cult, Ava disappeared. And what happened during that time? She was given some sort of pills. It was never specified what kind of pills they were. She could have been a psych patient for all we know. And Max, who she also "made", took revenge on the bunnies. Ava and Max were like the opposite sides of Samantha's personality that were fighting her inner fights in the "real world". But it doesn't totally add up since she did witness making people out of rabbits during that time. Or was it all a psychotic episode? Or could we look at it as an outsider's view of the "normal" that seems incomprehensible to her? Such a weird story.
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3 people found this helpful
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Sa'tara Thornton
5.0 out of 5 stars Captivating
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 26, 2023
Verified Purchase
Bunny was a beautifully written novel that explored in the world of creation and imagination. The main character Samantha showed that reader what it’s like living in two different worlds but not being able to balance both. The book kept me on edge the whole time since opening the book I didn’t know what I was getting myself into. To me I felt as though the book got more inter towards the end and I wouldn’t mind reading a few more hundred pages. Even thought it got a little riveting it ended beautifully giving the main character a piece of love that many characters in the book were yearning for all along. I would love to read more by this author.
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Jasmine
4.0 out of 5 stars What in The Sims?
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 2, 2023
Verified Purchase
Bunny was a fun read that takes your mind in different directions. The writing is superb but confusing at times and might throw you off track.

Overall, I’d recommend it to others but would let them know that some re-reading in certain sections might be required.

The author is a fellow DU grad so she automatically gets my stamp of approval!
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Amazon Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars Trippy
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on July 25, 2022
Verified Purchase
This was my first time reading a dark book like this, that wasn't an older classic. There were times when it was confusing and maybe a bit too creepy for me. The plot itself was weird - but, I suppose that's the point. Despite that, it can't be denied that the writing itself was amazing. The descriptions and imagery were amazing; Awad has phenomenal choice in words. I didn't know whether or not I would finish it at first, but I'm glad that I did. The last chapter alone bumped it from a 3 star to a 4 star for me. I definitely want to reread it again later, with new eyes after having completed it. And, if a book can get you to want to read it twice, I'd say it's a pretty great book.
10 people found this helpful
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Leesha lee
4.0 out of 5 stars I like it :)
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on November 4, 2022
Verified Purchase
Ive been trying to get into reading more. I found this to be one of the few books I actually finished and annotated happily. Worth the read certain parts i really loved others were just okay.
2 people found this helpful
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LTJ
2.0 out of 5 stars Bunny is a weird and bizarre disappointment of a novel
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on April 12, 2022
Verified Purchase
“Bunny” by Mona Awad started off really interesting and then goes into some very weird uncharted waters. I see this is considered a horror novel but it has elements of fantasy that ends up just making things really confusing when events and situations start happening.

I personally didn’t mind it as it started to make me really engaged and excited to see where things were going. The problem is I started to notice that things started to get a bit boring with way too much dialogue that is repeated and not properly explained. I think if Awad spent more time explaining this whole bunny angle and putting a better horror twist on it, things could have gotten better as the novel progressed.

Unfortunately, the buildup to the ending felt really flat. I was expecting so much more and even in my head came up with a few scenarios that could have really turned this into a blockbuster of a novel. It started out really creepy, lost some momentum, picked up a bit, lost more momentum, got super interesting/weird, then lost even more momentum, and then the ending came and it was extremely lame. I literally had at least two scenarios for the ending that was significantly better than what ultimately ended up happening. I was left with a “THAT’S IT?!!?!?” moment once I finished and I hated it.

I felt the main protagonist, Samantha, was mostly a whiner from start to finish and the moments she could have redeemed herself never came. Every character with the exception of Ava and Max was uninteresting. I felt all the different “bunnies” made things even more confusing as they have nicknames, then real names, then they become interchanged so you start to forget who is who and just keep reading to see what happens because they’re too generic. Way too many pages dedicated to dialogue that didn’t really add anything when it mattered most and felt like it was rambling most of the time.

I give “Bunny” by Mona Awad a 2/5 as her writing style is great but things could have been scarier and fleshed out more to the point where this could have been a better horror novel. I didn’t even feel this was even a real horror novel and felt more like a young adult novel with a weird dark fantasy twist. The ending didn’t deliver as I thought it was and it’s a shame, I enjoyed reading this to a degree due to the curiosity of what the hell was going on but it went downhill quickly for me at around 70% on. Overall, I ended up being pretty disappointed with this one and am looking forward to my next read.
7 people found this helpful
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Emily
5.0 out of 5 stars Deliciously heartbreaking!
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 23, 2023
Verified Purchase
Deliciously heartbreaking!
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Cheryl
4.0 out of 5 stars World Not As It Seems
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 7, 2022
Verified Purchase
This is a rollercoaster of a ride. Is this a dream or is this real? You don't know from one moment to the next. Could be make believe or a drunken drug ridden realty. Who is to say?
2 people found this helpful
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Kindle Customer
3.0 out of 5 stars What did I just read?
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on June 5, 2022
Verified Purchase
Okay, what did I actually read yesterday?

This book, from start to finish, felt like [book:Disorientation|58350424] to me, which is another recent release literary fiction novel that I'm not sure I liked. The premise of Bunny is fun - a woman in her last year of fiction writing grad school at an incredibly prestigous university struggles to write, to befriend the other women in her cohort, and to stay sane, quite honestly. But the events of the novel were .... I don't even know.

So many people loved this novel. So. Many. People. And while I get why they loved it, I just did not. In part, I think the animal violence that happened so haphazarly and without concern - and with no trigger warnings ANYWHERE that I could see - disrupted my reading often. The unreliability of the narrator is something I normally love, but in this case I was never led to believe that the events unfolding were due to her unreliability, but more due to the nature of this fantastical town and the events happening at the university.

If you're looking for more speculative literary fiction, this one's for you.
10 people found this helpful
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