Cell (novel)/YMMV: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (Robkelk moved page Cell/YMMV to Cell (novel)/YMMV: moving to make room for a disambiguation page, and to match Wikipedia's name)
(post-move category cleanup)
 
Line 7: Line 7:
* [[The Woobie]] - Alice Maxwell is a high school sophomore who spends the first half of the book recovering from the trauma of having her mother go insane and try to kill her, then witnessing more violence in an hour than most people see in their entire lives. Even though she does seem happier near the end, {{spoiler|the end for her comes a bit short}}.
* [[The Woobie]] - Alice Maxwell is a high school sophomore who spends the first half of the book recovering from the trauma of having her mother go insane and try to kill her, then witnessing more violence in an hour than most people see in their entire lives. Even though she does seem happier near the end, {{spoiler|the end for her comes a bit short}}.


{{worksubpagefooter}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Cell]]
[[Category:YMMV]]

Latest revision as of 00:38, 17 July 2021


  • Complete Monster - Gunner. When a character is Mind Raped and nailed up to a building with shards of glass and allowed to bleed out, fully aware of the whole thing, and people feel like they got off too light, you know that they did something really horrible.
  • Crowning Moment of Funny: The description of Stephen King is present as with a lot of novels which wish to give a little bit of info on the author. However, this particular paragraph concludes with the phrase, "[Stephen King] has never owned a cellphone".
  • Ho Yay - Tom is canonically gay. Clay...is not, however, he does kiss Tom twice in extremely somber, emotional moments, and also muses about getting to know him better a lot.
  • Like You Would Really Do It: Averted with Alice's death
  • Paranoia Fuel: To hell and back.
  • The Woobie - Alice Maxwell is a high school sophomore who spends the first half of the book recovering from the trauma of having her mother go insane and try to kill her, then witnessing more violence in an hour than most people see in their entire lives. Even though she does seem happier near the end, the end for her comes a bit short.

Back to Cell (novel)