Reviews

Forbidden by Tabitha Suzuma

hannadaniels7's review against another edition

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5.0

Por donde comenzar... al principio no creí que esta historia me gustara tanto, pero la manera en que la autora desarrolla la trama te atrae y te envuelve, a pesar que es un tema delicado te hace sentir toda clase de emociones y sentimientos... el toque que le da a cada personaje es perfecto, creo que me he enamorado de Lochan!

jolietjane's review against another edition

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3.0

Could have been shorter and a little fanfiction-y.

eherndon's review against another edition

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3.0

This was much like reading Lolita. Incredibly incredibly, disturbing but yet still a compelling and well written story. Even when an author takes on a disturbing topic like pedophilia or incest, it still has a lot of value. While I didn't particularly like the story, or agree with it, I think it was a compelling story that showed a different perspective on a highly taboo subject.

hlthorner's review against another edition

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4.0

Forbidden was an excellent book. I've never read anything dealing with an incest relationship, so this was very different for me.
Maya and Lochan have always felt more like partners than siblings due to having to take care of their siblings together. Eventually, they fall in love and begin to have a sexual relationship in secret. I gave this four stars because it felt predictable to me. I had a feeling that when they finally had sex, they were going to get caught, and I was right. And I also thought one or both of them were going to commit suicide, that also proved to be true with Lochan killing himself to protect Maya and their younger siblings.
I have to say that I was a little disgusted by their relationship, but only because I have a brother two years younger and it is literally impossible for me to think of him like that. But with Maya and Lochan, it seemed right with those two. It seemed like fate made a mistake and they were meant to be together and raise children, but they ended up having to raise their own siblings instead of their own children.
I would recommend this book to anyone who can handle how taboo their relationship is. Yeah this is classified as an young adult book, but you have to be very mature to read this book.

14ellis14's review against another edition

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medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No

2.0

lavenderrapture's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional sad
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character

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ygraine00's review against another edition

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3.0

Have you ever read Flowers in the Attic?

Well, this is a modernized version of it.

lady_jess1's review against another edition

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5.0

Ever felt the need to feel extremely depressed for several days? Then read this book! Post reading it you will feel like shit for at least 72 hours guaranteed!
People said The Fault in Our Stars made them cry?
Ha. Ha. Ha.

Seriously though great book. Couldn't put it down.

msjjrosy's review against another edition

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5.0

Wow. Absolutely heartbreaking, I cried almost the whole time reading this book.

witchytragedy's review against another edition

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4.0

This book left no stone unturned to break my heart and slowly put it back together again and then brutally shatter it. Unforgettable. Painful.

I was a bit apprehensive about picking up this book because it’s no secret that it deals with the topic of incest – a brother and a sister falling in love, not everyone’s cup of tea. Certainly, not mine. Don’t get me wrong, I have zero issues about any kind of relationships but it’s still a subject that is not accepted in a judgmental society and I wasn’t quite sure as to how the author would go about bringing forward the story.

All credits and respect to Tabitha Suzuma for weaving together this masterpiece – so raw and emotional that it left you aching long after it finished. Her writing is beyond perfect and the -a little more to the narrative style- of it really grew on me. Coming to the characters, my, I have absolutely no words to express what I felt about them, for them. Lochan was beautifully written and you could really understand his character well. He had an amazon full of responsibilities and one could feel his internal conflicts and growing frustrations with every turning page. I was literally shaking my leg in nervousness when I felt his anxiety coming through; that’s how magnificently he was crafted. And even though I felt like I connected to Lochan’s character more, Maya’s character was just as heart-wrenching. She was Lochan’s anchor, his safe place to retreat to and she made sure she took every step to keep the peace of the house. Kit was a character that I felt was a little too mature for his age but I think when you lack a parental figure to teach you right from wrong, you grow up pretty soon whether it’s in a good way or bad as in his case. And lastly, Tiffin and Willa, the little ones kept the innocence of the book intact and I honestly wanted to shake some sense into their witch of a mother to atleast have a little consideration and affection for them.

What I liked about this book was the fact that the author didn’t bombard you with the romance. Even though the description was a give away to what was going to happen between Maya and Lochan, Tabitha Suzuma really let it happen on its own and it felt very normal even though that was far from the case. My heart especially went out to Lochan when he was going through an emotional turmoil inside him after he accepts the fact that he is in fact in love with his sister, the one person that he cannot have.

The ending, man, the ending just left me a sobbing mess. Embarrassingly, I was reading this book in school during a leisure period and I think I frightened a couple of my friends from my hiccuping and ugly tearing up. I thought I knew what was going to happen and geared myself up for it but all was futile. Not in a million years did I think that such a situation would befall the family. I started feeling my eyes well up in the part where Kit desperately tries to run behind the police car that was taking Lochan away but fails to do so, you could understand that despite their differences Kit loved his brother and didn’t mean giving Maya and Lochan away. After that, it went downhill for my emotional stability.

This review does absolutely no justice to this book. It really made me think about subjects that society sushes us about. Apart from the incestual romance, the author has taken on some more brave topics of abuse, dysfunctional families and mental trauma and instability due to circumstances and fit it rightly into the book. I do think you should atleast give this book a try before forming an opinion – good or bad.