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Laura Pohl

Author of The Grimrose Girls

5+ Works 875 Members 16 Reviews

Series

Works by Laura Pohl

The Grimrose Girls (2021) 545 copies, 9 reviews
The Last 8 (2019) 172 copies, 6 reviews
The Wicked Remain (2022) 128 copies, 1 review
The First 7 (The Last 8, 2) (2020) 29 copies
Doomed 1 copy

Associated Works

All Systems Red (2017) — Translator, some editions — 8,457 copies, 484 reviews
Relit: 16 Latinx Remixes of Classic Stories (2024) — Contributor — 41 copies, 2 reviews
Why on Earth: An Alien Invasion Anthology (2025) — Contributor — 18 copies
For the Rest of Us (2025) — Contributor — 14 copies, 1 review

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21st century (4) aliens (5) aromantic (6) boarding school (5) dark academia (5) dnf (6) ebook (6) fairy tales (13) fantasy (29) fiction (14) goodreads import (4) Kindle (6) lesbian (3) LGBT (4) LGBTQ (7) LGBTQIA+ (8) magic (4) murder (7) mystery (17) own (4) queer (8) retelling (5) romance (3) science fiction (27) series (5) teen (4) thriller (4) to-read (115) YA (11) young adult (30)

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Reviews

16 reviews
The Last 8 started strong but ultimately fell flat for me.
The characters seemed rather shallow which made the whole power of friendship/found family stuff towards that became prominent near the end feel unearned and cheesy. Some character motivations also felt underdeveloped. It wasn't that any of their actions were completely unexplainable or stupid, but the lack of depth or insight into the character's emotional states and motivations made some of their actions read very much as plot show more contrivances more than what would make sense for them in-universe.
I was also disappointed in the sci-fi elements. Certain aspects of the alien species and technology seemed pure fantasy with no attempt at a justification, while some of it tried for more sci-fi. It didn't come together well for me, but other's might not mind. The invading alien species were also very intriguing in the beginning, but ultimately became shallow, uninteresting villains.
As the book got close to its conclusion it really lost steam and I could tell it wasn't going to have a satisfying conclusion. A reveal that one of the characters had the potential to develop reality warping abilities immediately made me suspect that any consequences for the characters actions in the finale would be erased before the end of the book. It took any and all tension out of the rest of the book. And rightly so, because lo and behold a character commits suicide and is revived seconds later, all the bad guys are erased from existence no problem, and we're off to a nice neat little happy ending that feels entirely unearned.
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½
Ella, Yuki, and Rory are returning to their elite boarding school, Grimrose Académie; however, this year they will begin the year with a funeral for their friend Ari. Ari was found drowned in the lake by the school just before the semester began. The girls don't believe Ari's death was a suicide like the officials say. Ella, Yuki and Rory don't make any headway in finding a cause for their friend's death until a new girl, Nani arrives. Nani finds a book of fairy tales with a list of names show more that Ari had been taking notes in along with a threatening note. The girls piece together that the deaths at Grimrose seem to follow the endings of fairy tales. But, are the deaths at the hand of a human killer or a curse upon the school?

The Grimrose Girls is a young adult murder mystery combined with a little magical realism. The writing drives directly into the mystery as the girls attend Ari's funeral. Each of the girl's personalities were well developed and evident from the beginning. Yuki strives for perfection in everything, Ella has a need to please everyone around her, Rory wants to be herself, despite her parents best efforts to make her someone else and Nani needs to find her place within this strange group of girls and discover why her father sent her to Grimrose. I loved the incorporation of the fairy tales around each girl's situation. The suspense built as fairy tail deaths begin to find their matching students. The line between magic and reality was easily blurred as the girls were pulled into their fairy tales and seemed to play out their tragic stories. Even more than the mystery, The Grimrose Girls is a story of friendship, coming of age and self-discovery. Each of the girls takes on figuring out who they are without Ari, the glue of the group. They also find who they are in relation to their fairy tales and decide if they want to play into their fate or change it. With a diversity of characters and a wonderful storyline, I can't wait to read the next book.

This book was received for free in return for an honest review.
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If I had to choose a character from The Grimrose Girls I most resemble, I’d have to choose Ella, because I spent so much time trying to match up all the characters in the book with their fairytales, I failed to see what was right in front of me.

The Grimrose Girls is the perfect read for folks who like light mysteries entwined with light fantasy, boarding schools, and fairytales come to life. It’s a little dark – it’s a little like Pretty Little Liars. And I’m okay with that! Ella, show more Rory, Nani, and Yuki are far more likable than the PLL crew. I chose this book because I wanted a dark fairytale retelling, and I got something in that range. It’s not focused on a single fairytale – it’s focused on a little bit of a lot of them. It’s interesting and fun to predict, and the rotating POVs kept things fresh.

I am a little disappointed Pohl focused primarily on commonly known fairytales. I get it – as a writer, it’s important to engage the reader. Internationally familiar fairytales (read: the ones turned into Disney movies) are an easy choice. With the exception of “The Juniper Tree“, all referenced fairytales will be very familiar to a diverse audience. I generally enjoyed Pohl’s writing, but there were certain characters I wished had been more tied to their stories. Some, like Ella, were very close. I would have liked more consistency across the board.

There is a lot of diversity and representation in The Grimrose Girls and I’m undecided how I feel about it. Typically I’m very excited for a breadth of diversity and I still am… but it also felt a bit contrived. Each character had a different race and a different sexuality. So, on the one hand, there is a lot of representation. On the other, I’m just cautious about the intense variety of it. There were a couple other little things that bugged me as well, including the whole “scholarships for employee’s children” angle that got Nani into the school in the first place. Some things lined up a little too perfectly without sensible in-world explanations.

As a whole, I really liked the book. Despite my uncertainty about the wealth of representation, I do want to nod to Pohl for taking the time to let Nani express frustration about Hawaii’s colonialism. It was a brief moment, but it stood out to me.

This was a good nighttime read, a good “what’s next” and “whodunnit” read. I’m a big fan of books that keep me analyzing and thinking – The Grimrose Girls did an amazing job of that.
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½
A decent read. But overly long-winded and too much girl angst. Easily could've cut fifty pages out of the 390 and still got a quality read. The ending was not that satisfactory either. I expected much more excitement due to the build-up. I'm hoping the follow-up book sequel does the story justice. I enjoyed the fairy tale angle. Ella was my favorite character, followed by Rory.
½

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Works
5
Also by
7
Members
875
Popularity
#29,265
Rating
4.1
Reviews
16
ISBNs
35
Languages
1

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