Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Pew
Pew | Catherine Lacey
41 posts | 29 read | 56 to read
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
review
Robotswithpersonality
Pew | Catherine Lacey
This post contains spoilers
show me
post image
Panpan

Got halfway and then skipped to the end because I couldn't take the pace. Heavy foreshadowing, building suspense? Felt like it was dragging. The author was skillful in demonstrating all the ways a close knit conservative, religious community can also be intensely narrow-minded and hypocritical, but that doesn't feel like new information. The cult-like aspects, perhaps. Still on the lookout for agender rep as main plot.

quote
Robotswithpersonality
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

Identity. Sense of self. Agender? Very much resonating.

6 likes1 stack add
blurb
Megabooks
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

So I was the liturgist at church this morning. At my church, it‘s kind of the opening act for the minister. 😉😊

I‘m not sure how to rate Lacey‘s book about a person found in church. I liked the way she used the fact that Pew didn‘t speak to reflect both the best and worst impulses of church members. I think she meant Pew to be a Christ-like figure, but how she brought their story to an end at the Forgiveness Festival didn‘t work for me.

BarbaraBB What a beautiful photo Meg! I hope you had a wonderful time. A pity that the book didn‘t completely work out for you. 7mo
Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks So awesome!! 7mo
Megabooks @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks thanks Misty! I love my church and was really excited to serve! 7mo
See All 7 Comments
Megabooks @BarbaraBB thank you, B! 🫶🏻 I did really enjoy the opportunity! 7mo
Cinfhen I was thinking about you all day! I knew you‘d be amazing 🤩 7mo
Megabooks @Cinfhen thank you!!! 😘😘 I hope you had a good Yom Kippur. I know it‘s a serious holiday so unsure whether it can be “good”, but I hope it was a positive experience. 💕💕💕💕 7mo
Cinfhen It was good in the sense that I had an easy fast and a meaningful day of prayer and reflection 😘😘hope to write you and @BarbaraBB later tonight/ tomorrow 7mo
67 likes7 comments
review
Bibliobear
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
Pickpick

A stranger appears, found sleeping on a church pew, and is taken in by the insular religious community there. In an effort to uncover who our recalictrant protagonist is, the community members reveal themselves, oftentimes inadvertently. What begins as welcoming turns to suspicion and mistrust as the community prepares for a festival. Lacey writes her story with a gathering menace that recalls the work of Shirley Jackson. A compelling read.

review
ReadingRachael
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
Pickpick

This was so good. Strong southern gothic vibes addressing issues of identity, othering, religious toxicity, and how well we know ourselves and our own motivations. The style in which this is written is very unique too. It reminds me a bit of Rachel Cusk‘s Outline trilogy in that much of the content is written as comments and confessions that are made to the MC (who says almost nothing themselves).

19 likes1 stack add
blurb
ReadingRachael
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

#FirstLineFridays
@ShyBookOwl

This is the very lengthy first line of “Pew” by Catherine Lacey

review
Rissreads
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
Pickpick

This book made me sad and mad and disgusted. It‘s so thought provoking.
We know we haven‘t always been fair to everyone. Certainly -no. But we‘ve always been fair to people according to what the definition of fair was at the time.
You know nothing more about the protagonist Pew from the beginning of the book to the end of the book. But you know a lot about the towns people from their reactions to them. Generosity turns to fear and suspicion, ⬇️

Rissreads because Pew refuses to conform and fit neatly into a box, and you MUST fit neatly into a box! This book was so unsettling and I will be thinking about this story for a long time, especially because it leaves so many questions unanswered. I can‘t wait to read more of Lacey‘s work. 1y
Lindy Nice review! I‘ve got Pew out from the library now and am looking forward to it. I enjoyed one of Lacey‘s earlier books: 1y
Rissreads @Lindy I will be interested to see what you think, it‘s a wonderful little book. 1y
See All 7 Comments
jlhammar Great review and great book! Thought-provoking indeed. 1y
Reggie Oof when they started locking her door at night. Great review. This book has been on my mind since Ive read it. 1y
Rissreads @Reggie what got me was the various towns people all talking about them as if they were not there in the room. So much of it was heartbreaking. 1y
Centique Great review! It really is one of a kind isn‘t it 💕 1y
41 likes1 stack add7 comments
review
Suet624
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
Pickpick

Lordy! I need to read this again, but more slowly. How an author does what Lacey did with this story is beyond me. Projections, assumptions, racism, gender, sexism, religion, supposed charity and altruism, compassion, all in a very short book. Thank you to those of you who recommended it. I‘m looking at you in particular @Reggie

Megabooks Stacked! She‘s an author I‘m really starting to love. She has this coming out soon. 1y
Suet624 @Megabooks the synopsis of her next book is wild! This is the first book I‘ve read by her and now I‘ll have to find her other books. 1y
HardcoverHearts That sounds amazing. 1y
See All 17 Comments
AmyG Oooo stacked. 1y
Suet624 @HardcoverHearts it‘s one that will stick with you. That‘s for sure. 1y
Suet624 @AmyG I think it‘s going to be one that I start handing out to friends and saying READ THIS! 1y
AmyG It worked with Fresh Water for Flowers, so…… 1y
Megabooks @Suet624 I loved this short story collection. 1y
Ruthiella Another successful #Reggimendation ! 😂 1y
Suet624 @Megabooks oh, thank you for the recommendation. I‘ll see if I can find it. 1y
Suet624 @AmyG LOL. It did! 1y
Suet624 @Ruthiella any book that Reggie recommends that isn‘t gory or scary I pay attention to. 🔥 1y
Reggie @Ruthiella @Suet624 this one got real close to being horror. It had that creeping sense of dread. This past weekend I went to a funeral of an aunt who was my grandmas oldest sister. I thought about this book as a deacon clumsily tried to tie her death to why you should be Catholic. And I just thought he didn‘t talk about how she left high school when her mother left them to help raise her 4 younger sisters and 2 brothers. The woman who didn‘t 👇🏼 1y
Reggie have any degrees but knew how to read and taught herself to make shelves. Like if there is evidence of any kind of God it‘s that people like her who are so kind and loving exist. And I thought of this book. My grandma always said that the sisters always thought of her as a mother. No one was there for them like she was growing up. Anyways. I‘m glad you liked the book, Sue. Also, was it me or was she ahead of the curve about people‘s hands 👇🏼 (edited) 1y
Reggie around other people‘s necks and sometimes people just stand around and don‘t do anything about it for a long time. It made me think of George Floyd. And the book came out 2 months around the time it happened. Just an eerie coincidence. 1y
batsy Great review, Sue. This sounds all kinds of intriguing. 1y
jlhammar This was such a good read. Great review! 1y
58 likes5 stack adds17 comments
blurb
Rissreads
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

This book is amazing! ♥️

jlhammar I thought so too! Really good. 1y
Reggie Oof, so many takeaways! 1y
38 likes2 comments
quote
Suet624
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

So true….

review
Reggie
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
Pickpick

This passage is on pg.9 and the hits just keep on comin‘. This book, THIS BOOK, totally took the kid I used to be, who grew up in church and rough housed him in the best way possible. An unknown person wakes up in the pew of a church during service and gets taken in by a family. It‘s all told by the people who see themselves refracted in this unknown person. It‘s a horror of humanity‘s conscience kind of book. There are some passages that👇🏼

Reggie will make you feel soooo stupid in your participation in some of the societal structures we as humans have erected. It even has me asking myself if I‘m a good human being and what does that cross with, is my good for everyone or does it hurt someone. It gets crazy. Lol this book. And the writing is so readable. Lacey is so good. Pick!! Thank you, Paula, for this book. ❤️ (edited) 1y
jlhammar And all that in so few pages! Amazing, right? So glad you loved it. Fantastic review! 1y
Reggie @jlhammar yeah, this one is gonna be with me for a minute. Thanks! 1y
See All 11 Comments
TheBookHippie That right there is it. (Pictured) 1y
Rissreads I can‘t wait to get my hands on a copy of this! I think I‘ll do it now online! 1y
Centique I‘m so glad you liked it Reggie! It just blew my mind. The unease of it still sits with me😬 Great review!! 1y
batsy Great review, Reggie. I'm absolutely intrigued by this! 1y
vivastory I LOVED this book, Very subtle & smart. One of the few contemporary books that I feel deserve a comparison to Shirley Jackson. 1y
Suet624 I don't know why I have this stacked already, but now I REALLY want to read this. 1y
Suet624 Oh my goodness! I just looked and it's at my library!!! 1y
Reggie @Suet624 you‘ll love it Sue. It‘s so good. I was walking around at work last night still thinking about it. 1y
64 likes6 stack adds11 comments
quote
Reggie
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

I love this book.

Erinreadsthebooks I have this on my shelf. Might need to bump it up 🤔 1y
jlhammar So good! I read it around this time last year. 1y
See All 9 Comments
Reggie @Erinreadsthebooks @Leftcoastzen yeah, this one is totally worth a read. 1y
Reggie @jlhammar I just finished it. I loved it. 1y
batsy Okay, wow... (!) 1y
AmiPlanincic What book is it 1y
Reggie @batsy and there are so many more passages that are so simply worded and feel like a slap across the face. And you have to go back and reread it to make sure what she is saying is what you think she is saying. It‘s sooo good. 1y
Reggie @AmiPlanincic it‘s Pew by Catherine Lacey. When we post. Usually up at the top of the post it will contain the name of the book that we‘re posting about. Hope this helps and hope you like the book if you read it. 1y
52 likes9 comments
review
Centique
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
Pickpick

This is a wonderfully strange little novel. A stranger wakes up in a small church in a small community and the congregation take turns figuring out who this person is and how they can help. In short chapters we end up with sharp insights into each person. A story with no plot but many glimpses of human failings, disconnection, weakness, violence and religiosity. A thought provoking book full of unease. 5 stars for me. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

vivastory I also really enjoyed this one 👏 2y
Centique @vivastory I need to read more Catherine Lacey now 🙂 2y
vivastory I've had this one on my TBR for awhile 2y
See All 20 Comments
andrew61 Sounds very interesting. 2y
Centique @vivastory wow that does sound mind blowing 🤯 2y
Centique @andrew61 I think you might like it Andrew. It would be a fast read for you! 2y
batsy Thought provoking and unease! Sign me up. Lovely review ❤️ 2y
sarahbarnes Great review! I really loved this one, too! 2y
sarahbarnes @vivastory I will say that for me, The Answers was unfortunately not as good as this one. 2y
vivastory @sarahbarnes That's a shame. Thanks for the heads up! 2y
vivastory @batsy I think you'd really like it. Slight Shirley Jackson vibes 2y
Centique @batsy thank you S 😘 I was thinking you might like this one! 2y
Rissreads Wow, this sounds so interesting! 2y
Centique @Rissreads it‘s such an unusual little book. Really loved it. 2y
Reggie I need to get to this one. I read the Answers by her and was incensed!!!!! It was good but some of the stuff in that book put me into a rage. 2y
Centique @Reggie I reckon you‘ll like this. Such a unique way of looking at humanity‘s problems it feels very fresh, even though you‘ve read many books on these themes. 2y
Reggie Ok, 20 pages in and I feel like I‘m already reading/walking on eggshells. 1y
Centique @Reggie I felt just the same! 1y
Reggie @vivastory @centique is it weird that I think of this as ALSO a trans novel? Lol or is it me just projecting into this book. Everyone is so obsessed with Pew‘s gender and then now we have this Nelson‘s dream of the woman who wants to be a horse. Idk, this book is a trip! 1y
Centique @Reggie I think you‘re exactly right! Categorising people, fitting them into all kinds of boxes, makes you fit in - even the lack of a name is a problem for this community. 1y
73 likes2 stack adds20 comments
quote
thestarlesscasea
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

"Sometimes I think that nobody is just one person, that actually we're a bunch of different people and we have to figure out how to get them all to cooperate and fool everyone else into thinking that we're just one person, even though everybody else is doing the same thing."

9 likes1 stack add
blurb
abookishbutterfly
Pew | Catherine Lacey

What‘s the best book you‘ve read so far in 2022?

For me, it is Pew by Catherine Lacey.

ShelleyBooksie These Silent Woods by Kimmi Cunningham Grant 2y
abookishbutterfly @ShelleyBooksie I loved that book so much! 2y
AmandaBlaze How High We Go in the Dark. 2y
See All 14 Comments
MilesnMelodies Lost Connections Johann Hari. 2y
abookishbutterfly @AmandaBlaze That one does sound really intriguing! 2y
abookishbutterfly @MilesnMelodies I‘ve been wanting to read that one, along with his newest book. 2y
Dragon Funny and heartfelt 2y
abookishbutterfly @Dragon I loved his first book, but haven‘t read that one yet! 2y
abookishbutterfly @TheNeverendingTBR I loved Crawdads too 🙂 2y
Dragon I haven‘t read his first book 📚 I must look it up and add to my To Read list 💚🐉 2y
abookishbutterfly @Dragon It‘s a tearjerker, but there are funny moments, as well! 2y
Dragon Thanks 🙏 💚🐉 2y
32 likes14 comments
blurb
abookishbutterfly
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

February Wrap Up

February favorite: Pew by Catherine Lacey

Friends recommend challenge: Fangs

Dead Silence ⭐️⭐️⭐️💫

Near the Bone ⭐️⭐️⭐️💫

Room ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Fangs ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

The Sound of Gravel ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

None Shall Sleep ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️💫

August ⭐️⭐️

The Changeling ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Yonder ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Ocean State ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Pew ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

My Sister, the Serial Killer ⭐️⭐️⭐️

And Then I Woke Up ⭐️⭐️⭐️

The Silence ⭐️

Suet624 The sound of gravel - good lord, what a book. 1y
47 likes1 comment
review
abookishbutterfly
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
Pickpick

This story is an exceptionally profound look at what lurks underneath the surface of “good” human beings. Superficially, the lines may seem simple, but many of those lines are laced with a profound second meaning. I loved processing what the author was trying to say through all of this.

My full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/4051160103

quote
abookishbutterfly
Pew | Catherine Lacey

“It began to seem possible that a person might have pains and thoughts that resisted language and had to be transfigured through an instrument, turned into pure sound, spun into the air, and heard.”

quote
abookishbutterfly
Pew | Catherine Lacey

“But what about when you lose someone who is still alive? When you lose track of the person you know within the person they‘ve become - what kind of grief is that?”

quote
abookishbutterfly
Pew | Catherine Lacey

“I had known hunger so well and for so long that fullness had been difficult to recognize, but now, faced with all of this, I could hardly eat. Since I had woken up in that pew, the meals had been endless and I wished I could have reached back and given one of them to those days of hunger in the past…”

quote
abookishbutterfly
Pew | Catherine Lacey

“Perhaps an honest feeling will always find a way to force itself through, an objector crying out in a crowd, hoping someone will hear.”

review
jlhammar
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
Pickpick

Ended my reading year on a high note. Southern gothic vibes with a dash of Shirley Jackson‘s The Lottery. Thought-provoking and mildly creepy.

review
sarahbarnes
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
Pickpick

This book uses a character who refuses to conform to rules and expectations to tell a story about how well evil can be cloaked in “goodness.” It made me feel a little Flannery O‘Connor and a little Shirley Jackson and I really liked it. I think it‘s also loosely based on the story “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas.”

32 likes1 stack add
blurb
Augustdana
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

Having a chill Sunday evening. I‘ve had this book on hold since July 2020 when it came out, and finally the right time has come. I‘ve put this off for too long! Also wow that deliver later button is a life saver !!

review
vivastory
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
Pickpick

The narrator of Lacey's novel wakes in a church in an anonymous American town during church service. Mostly mute, the narrator is nicknamed Pew by the Rev, & is sheltered by a family. The family, & assorted townspeople, ply Pew with questions about their identity & history to no avail. The tactics slowly escalate from charity to outright hostility as sinister undertones creep in amidst discussions of an upcoming Festival.👇

vivastory This is a quiet, yet smart hybrid of McCullers, Le Guin & Shirley Jackson, that manages to retain it's own originality. I loved Lacey's book about identity, family, religion, outcasts & community. 3y
Suet624 Sounds fascinating! 3y
vivastory @Suet624 I think that you would like it! 3y
See All 6 Comments
Reggie The book she wrote before this made me soooo angry so I‘ve been looking to pick this up. Great review, Scott. 3y
vivastory @Reggie Are you talking about The Answers? I think I might have that one on my shelves. I'll have to scour them tomorrow. I can't wait to get them organized in a couple of weeks when my new shelves arrive. It's driving me crazy. 3y
Reggie Yes, I read it when what #metoo was just starting. They went well together. Yayy for new shelves! 3y
67 likes1 stack add6 comments
blurb
vivastory
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

I'm a little under halfway through, but I'm thoroughly enjoying this quiet novel about identity with sinister undertones.

52 likes1 stack add
review
ClairesReads
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
Pickpick

Pew is a brief novel about insular communities, and the ways we seek to understand. Lacey explores the concept of categorisation and the role it plays in our social structures and relationships. It‘s a story that‘s clearly been influenced by Le Guin‘s ‘The Ones That Walk Away from Omelas‘ and Jackson‘s ‘The Lottery‘. At times these references were a little too close for me, and so this story didn‘t offer me enough that was new.

quote
ClairesReads
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

Yeah this is going to be the goods

21 likes1 stack add
review
Emilymdxn
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
Pickpick

I loved this bizarre, thoughtful little book about a person of no particular race or gender, who does not speak, who is found sleeping in a church. I liked how Pew was never pinned down, and how the way they inspired people to confess to them felt so natural and didn‘t need explaining. The whole community was beautifully sketched in, subtle and not a word out of place.

73 likes3 stack adds
blurb
AnneCecilie
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

December 7: Cut by Catherine Lacey. Story published in the New Yorker

We meet a middle aged woman as she interacts with her husband, friends and students.

“Menstruation, for instance. Humanity should have solved that one by now, but instead had just ignored it, like dishes in the sink, for thousands of years.”

This was the first story by a woman and my favorite so far.

review
ephemeralwaltz
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
Pickpick

When an individual of ambiguous race, age and gender is found sleeping on a church pew in a small, secluded town in the American south, they are taken in and given shelter by a family whose first reactions to the stranger are curiosity and empathy. When their silence lasts for days, with the town Festival (mysterious in itself..) approaching, the community grows impatient and our quickness to judge others and need for labels become apparent...

ephemeralwaltz A fantastic narrative exercise: despite many chapters from Pew's (the stranger's nickname) POV, the reader is left without the key info to draw any conclusions regarding their origin or identity but does gain broad insight to the character's feelings and perceptions of reality. It really makes you think about the paradox of gaining access to someone's mind without knowing *what they are*. And why do we need to know that in the first place? 4y
Tanisha_A Fab review! I definitely want to read this. 4y
Cinfhen This sounds like it‘s ripe for bookclub discussion!! What do u think???? Should I suggest it??? 4y
See All 9 Comments
Reggie Have you read her other one about the different girlfriends for one guy. That one almost made me punch a hole in the wall. Not cause it was bad but the subject matter in there was so aggravating. Imma stack this. Thanks! 4y
Kalalalatja Great review! I already have it stacked, but now I‘m even more interested 4y
ephemeralwaltz @Cinfhen I think it'd be great for a discussions! So much is left unsaid that so many things can be said! 4y
ephemeralwaltz @Reggie I haven't read anything else by her but your comment made me laugh out loud 🤣🤣 thanks for stacking, I'm glaf 4y
ephemeralwaltz @Kalalalatja I hope you can pick it up soon! 😍 4y
53 likes7 stack adds9 comments
blurb
ErickaS_Flyleafunfurled
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

My dear friend sent me a gift card to Jenny Lawson‘s Nowhere Books! All my spoils arrived today! Is there a word for wanting to read every book at once?

LeahBergen “Gluttonbooken”? That almost sounds German. 😂😂 4y
erzascarletbookgasm Lovely choices. 👌 Don‘t know the book in the centre, though. 4y
S3V3N Nice! 4y
54 likes4 comments
review
KarenUK
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
Pickpick

‘Pew‘ whose gender, race and age are unknown, is found sleeping in a church by the god-fearing residents of small Southern town. Welcomed under their protective wing as they plan for an ominous festival, Pew‘s muteness leads the townsfolk to fill the silence with their confessions and secrets. But soon their openness and kindness turns to suspicion and fear. The story is unsettling, the writing beautifully haunting and really got under my skin.

KarenUK This was my #bookspin @TheAromaofBooks 😊👍 4y
TheAromaofBooks Great review!!! 4y
Cinfhen Sounds good/ hadn‘t heard of it before 4y
See All 7 Comments
Kalalalatja New to me, but it sounds really interesting! 4y
cdcnmac Excited to start this one later today!!🤓💕 4y
KarenUK @cdcnmac 👍😘💕 4y
ephemeralwaltz Just finished this and loved it! So much to think about. 4y
48 likes4 stack adds7 comments
blurb
KarenUK
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

@TheAromaofBooks Here are my #bookspin and #doublespin choices. Super excited about both! 💕

TheAromaofBooks Yay!!!! 4y
squirrelbrain I loved The Dutch House! 4y
KarenUK @squirrelbrain Did you do the print or audio Helen? I hear Tom Hanks does the audio and that its great.... 4y
squirrelbrain I bought a beautiful limited edition print copy, but I‘ve heard such good things about the audio. I can imagine that the prose lends itself well to audio anyway - and Mr Hanks is a wonderful bonus! 😋 4y
33 likes4 comments
blurb
parasolofdoom
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

July reads. Always my best month of reading every year ❤. Everything was good this month too! I literally rated every single one 4 or 5 stars on Goodreads and only a couple were 3.5 rounded up.

blurb
KarenUK
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

#weeklyforecast @Cinfhen

In Progress....
- finish up my Fleishman re-read on audio for a bookclub on Zoom Wednesday

Up next....
- Two on the left for #popsummer20
- the well-travelled ‘Before the Coffee gets cold‘ is up soon, so I can send it on to the next lucky Litten
- The hardcover of Pew is so beautiful I couldn‘t resist, and the story sounds intriguing

Cinfhen Oh wow!!! It got to you sooooo quick 4y
33 likes1 comment
blurb
parasolofdoom
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image

I've been absentee for awhile but going to try update more regularly again. Tonight I'm reading Pew, a quite experimental lit fic. Narrator of unknown gender, race, age, background finds themself in a deeply religious small town after being discovered sleeping in a church pew. Not super far in but has all the feel of a magic realism parable without anything I can point to that is ACTUALLY magic realism. I'm quite enjoying this though.

blurb
Well-ReadNeck
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
44 likes1 stack add
review
Well-ReadNeck
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
Pickpick

I so love Catherine Lacey‘s novels and this one is no exception. This was the rare book that I received an ARC from both #Edelweiss and #netgalley (as a result of my mismanagement of requests really) #ARC

75 likes2 stack adds
review
Maude
Pew | Catherine Lacey
post image
Pickpick

This has been my favorite read of 2020 so far! It was beautifully written and I can't wait to buy a copy so I can mark some of the lovely quotes/passages. I do think it will not be for everyone's tastes, there is a lot of ambiguity (both in the main character Pew and in what you take away from the story). I loved the mystery of Pew and being drawn into the mind of a character, yet not knowing their gender, race or age. Thanks to #netgalley for ARC

66 likes2 stack adds