3 star, YA

Review: Youโ€™re So Dead by Ash Parsons

A hilarious Agatha Christie-inspired YA thriller-comedy about three best friends who sneak into an influencers-only festival event (gone wrong), only to discover a killer is in their midst–and they have to uncover the truth and solve the mystery before it’s too late. Perfect for fans of One of Us Is Lying and Truly Devious .

Plum Winter has always come in second to her sister, the unbelievably cool, famous influencer Peach Winter. And when Peach is invited to an all-expenses paid trip to a luxurious art and music festival for influencers on a private island in the Caribbean, Plum decides it’s finally her time to shine. So she intercepts the invite–and asks her two best friends Antonia and Marlowe to come along to the fest with her. It’ll be a spring break they’ll never forget.

But when Plum and her friends get to the island, it’s not anything like it seemed in the invite. The island is run-down, creepy, and there doesn’t even seem to be a festival–it’s just seven other quasi-celebrities and influencers, and none of the glitz and glamor she expected. Then people start to die…

Plum and her friends soon realize that someone has lured each of them to the “festival” to kill them. Someone has a vendetta against every person on the island–and no one is supposed to leave the island alive. So, together, Plum, Antonia, and Marlowe will do whatever it takes to unravel the mystery of the killer, and fight to save themselves and as many influencers as they can, before it’s too late.



Letโ€™s set the night on fire!

When you didnโ€™t think there was such a book that existed like this, Youโ€™re So Dead produced a satirical, suspenseful story that seems like it could really be a thing in this day and age of social media obsession.

Plum Winter, our dear protagonist, has always felt like second-tier, especially with a famous influencer older sister who left her behind for fame and status. When a invitation letter for her sister comes for a prestigious, influencer-only festival on a paradise island, Plum is all for taking her sisterโ€™s place (along with a few of her closest friends).

A parody of the infamous Fyre Festival, little do Plum and her friends know, theyโ€™re stepping not into a wild 3-day music festival butโ€ฆa sinister plan that will lead to casualties.

I loved the premise of this. It was strange yet very believable. Why wouldnโ€™t some deranged person/persons go to the ultimate length to deceive some potential targets to come to this isolated island for fun, masking their evil motives? I most definitely enjoyed seeing how the group of semi-influencers that ended up on the island slowly understand that this was never about music and rubbing elbows with more influential people. It was a lure to bring them to their deaths.

For no one is meant to survive Pyre Festival. (Yes, Pyre Festival is the nameโ€ฆ)

The suspenseful aspect definitely built up well. You knew someone was going to die. Sometimes you knew it was going to occur within a certain time window (thank you, chapter titles). Yet I didnโ€™t know who, when or how it was going down and that left me on my toes! Itโ€™s part of my favourite element in thrillers. The wait. The drop of the shoe. Turning around and seeing a friendly face thatโ€ฆisnโ€™t actually your friend.

Thatโ€™s right, folks. Because at Pyre Festival, there are a number of victims who want to escape the island.

But there is a killer among them.

*dun dun dun dun*

Okay, that was me trying to insert scary music. Now, the things I didnโ€™t enjoy as much was the lack of enthusiasm I had for Plum and her 2 best friends who were dragged into this misadventure with her. They were nice girls who were never meant to be a part of this murderous mayhem. Plum, in particular, always felt so guilty for putting them all in this place. But she was so focused and obsessed on being seen, on being special, that is as the whole reason why she stole the invite from her sister in the first place. I understand, believe me, but there was just so much guilt in that girl.

Oh, and she happened to be in love with her best friend. Who may die on this island with her. The romance bits felt a little out of place (you know, amidst all the trying-not-to-die parts), but it was a nice bit of LGBTQ representation there so I canโ€™t fault it.

To be honest, a lot of the people stuck on the island were not very enjoyable. I suppose thatโ€™s what made it entertaining. Who would want to target all these people in particular? Was it just one of them that set a killer off, or did they all have an enemy in common? So yes, they were an interesting bunch but not always great people to be around. I only liked poor, naive streamer Jude. But mostly because he reminded me of a lost puppy dog trying not to get kicked.

All this to say is, if youโ€™re looking for some satirical, island-trapped murder plot, then look no further. Youโ€™re So Dead is the book for you!

Overall Recommendation:

Youโ€™re So Dead is a great combination of comical satire, suspense and thriller as we follow a group of semi-influencers trapped on an island under the premise of an epic music festival that would elevate their popularity. With a killer among them hunting one target at a time, no one knows who or when another one of them might fall victim to whoever meticulously planned such an elaborate farce. While this means the characters may not be the most likeable (theyโ€™ve all done something that makes them a little mean), theyโ€™re realistic and you canโ€™t help but hope the ones you like donโ€™t turn out to be the devil in disguise. A quick and suspenseful read, itโ€™s definitely an interesting book to pick up if you donโ€™t know what youโ€™re feeling at the moment for your next read.

top ten tuesday

Top Ten Tuesday: Fictional Males I Like

Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together.


Good morning, friends! I am tired this morning after a pretty stressful work Monday. But I am happy to bring to you this list of fictional male characters I have loved over the years. I didnโ€™t want to phrase it as โ€œcrushesโ€ because I think Iโ€™ve moved beyond crushing on fictional guys at my age, but I did really like these guys for various reasons as I was immersed in their respective book/series.

If you notice a pattern among these books, I swear, love triangles rattle me BECAUSE I end up liking one guy more than the other and my heart breaks for them if they donโ€™t get chosen.

In no particular order at all, here are the guys who have captured my heart in some way, shape, or form over the years.

1. Ash

Cold, aloof, prince of the Unseelie Court, Ash was everything teenage me loved in a male love interest. He was the guy who could change if the right person entered his life and shook things up. And the insane journey he took in order to be with his love in his own book, where heโ€™s on the cover, and in his own POV was the reason I loved it as much as the first book that started the series. Team Ash here all the way!

Continue reading “Top Ten Tuesday: Fictional Males I Like”
wrap up

August 2021 Wrap Up and TBR

Good morning friends and fellow book readers! I canโ€™t believe summer is almost over and the month of August has come to its end. I am officially off probation from my job this week (yay!) and hope the busyness at work will go down a little so I can enjoy some more time to read and relax after hours.

With the end of August comes school again, and I wonder how the school year would look this time. I donโ€™t know where you live but here at least, itโ€™s hopefully going still be done safely while balancing kidsโ€™ educations and experience.

How have your summers been? Did you have a good month of reading? Because of my work, I havenโ€™t had as much time to read this month but I did manage to read a number nonetheless while juggling weddings and catching up with friends on a patio. Letโ€™s begin, shall we?

What did I read this month?

3.5+ Potions

A Taste for Love by Jennifer Yen (review here)

  • A take on a baking competition doubled as a dating competition for time spent with the protagonist as part of the prize in this Asian, own-voices story featuring Taiwanese culture and food.

3 Potions

Made in Korea by Sarah Suk (review here)

  • Two student-led businesses compete to be the best during senior year in order to secure money for both studentsโ€™ personal aspirations in this novel filled with K-pop and Korean beauty products.

Youโ€™re So Dead by Ash Parsons

  • A satire on the Fyre Festival mixed with murder as influencers are invited to an island for a festival only to find themselves at the mercy of a killer – who is one of them.

Sunkissed by Kasie West

  • Shy, peacemaker Avery goes a summer without internet at camp with her family and meets a cute counsellor who may just challenge her to step out of the comfortable box she has put herself in.

Someone We Know by Shari Lapena

  • When a neighbour is found murdered not far away, a small suburban neighbourhood has their secrets unfolding as detectives dig into their lives, where nothing and no one is exactly as they seem.

1-2 Potions

All These Bodies by Kendare Blake (review here)

  • A paranormal horror (initially thought as a murder mystery) that follows the sheriffโ€™s son as the supposed spree of a serial killer has come to an end in their town – in the form of a teenage girl covered in blood at the last crime scene.

Current reading list

  • I Believe in a Thing Called Love by Maurene Goo
  • Witchshadow by Susan Dennard

TBR list

  • So We Meet Again by Suzanne Park
  • Where Dreams Descend by Janella Angeles
  • From Blood and Ash by Jennifer L. Armentrout

I hope everyone had a great summer (if youโ€™re in the Northern Hemisphere). Hereโ€™s to looking forward to fall and the coming of vibrant colours (and pumpkin spice lattes!).