54 pages ā¢ 1 hour read
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āāDonāt be a tease.ā He frowns, his features contorting in the dim glow of the streetlight above us. āAll you women are the same. Youāre never going to land a husband if you wonāt even kiss a guy on a date, you know.āā
Freida McFadden positions Sydneyās date, Kevin, as emblematic of The Misogyny and Safety Risks in the Dating World. The use of the word ācontortingā in this passage frames Kevin as monstrous, as does his sense of entitlement that Sydney accept his sexual advances on their first date.
āMy eyes are pulled away [ā¦] to the pulsation of her carotid artery, below the angle of her jaw. Most peoplesā hearts beat at about sixty to one hundred pulses every minuteāI wonder how fast Daisyās heart beats. If I could watch for a minute, I could calculate her heart rate.ā
In the āBeforeā sections of the novel, McFadden establishes Tomās obsession with blood and violence, linking it thematically to the physical and emotional violence perpetuated by his father, highlighting Cycles of Violence and Neglect in Families as a central theme. As an adult, he channels this fascination into a career as a medical examiner to indulge his violent tendencies in a socially acceptable context.
āAll I want is a decent man who doesnāt have a drinking or a gambling problem, who is fun to talk to, who has a nice smile, and who likes me as much as I like them.ā
By using the dating word as a backdrop for a psychological thriller, McFadden frames the challenges of finding basic romantic connection as a kind of exercise in psychological warfare. McFadden defines Sydney as a character through her deep desire for human connectionānot an idealized fairy tale, but a relationship grounded in real, honest affection.
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By Freida McFadden