Member Reviews

3.5 stars
Guillotine is an exceptionally gory revenge horror reminiscent of Kill Bill. This story features numerous detailed kills with clear explanations of how & why each victim meets their end. Dez befriends the son of a fashion magazine superstar, aiming to meet the mother. However, the meeting takes place on a private island, ideal for a group plotting justified revenge. True to form for this author, it's an engaging read, provided you can stomach it.
The horrifying imagery and complex characters are really what made this story unputdownable .After devouring Bloom in a day, Dawson has become an automatic buy for me.
If you're into horror, this is must-read. It's graphic, challenges the elitism of the wealthy, and introduces characters you'll love to hate alongside those you'll cheer for. I'll be recommending this to all my fellow horror book enthusiasts!

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Thank you to NetGalley and Titan Books for providing this book, with my honest review below.

Guillotine was a ride, but I’m not sure how I feel about it. Definitely taking advantage of some of the appeal of movies like Parasite, this book explores a very messed up mystery awaiting blue collar Dez on the private island of the Ruskin family. While Dez doesn’t actually love or like Patrick Ruskin given her interest in a career in fashion she’s sure if she can get some time with his fashion magazine owner mother, Marie, she’ll get a huge leg up. What follows is a slow build up of dread as Dez has to sign an NDA to get on the island and sees the family dynamics along with their treatment of their staff (always wearing pink - which the family seems to be banned from). When the servants rebel against the family Dez learns a lot more about the messed up rules the family lives by… and sees a lot of brutal killings.

The story was interesting in theory and even the high levels of gore was tolerable given how well those scenes were written (which serves as a warning to future readers if you’re queasy). What has me conflicted is that there were great story lines to explore within the family, Dez, the servants’ experiences, and what happens off island which just really weren’t. Spending more time with those pieces and slightly less with the horror would have hit the perfect balance for this book. As it was there were moments where the violence became a little too gratuitous, like we the readers were meant to revel in this alone.

I liked the seeds of what was planted in regard to the storylines not explored but I would have loved to read more and without them I find this story entertaining but not satisfying.

Warning to readers, the genre currently shows as general fiction and humor and satire but should be marked as horror and perhaps thriller.

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Guillotine is the most gore filled revenge horror since Kill Bill. I just hope the author exercised some demons by writing this book. Dez befriends the son of THE fashion magazine superstar, in the hopes of a meet with the mother. Unfortunately for Dez, that meeting is set for an private island, where the isolation is perfect for the group that has justifiable revenge planned.
As always with this author an enjoyable read, as long as you aren't squeamish

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TRULY one of the most messed up and gory books I have read in a long time and I am ABSOLUTELY obsessed with it. I became familiar with Dawson’s work when I read Bloom which psychologically messed me up for YEARS. When I saw she had a new horror book coming out, I KNEW I needed to read it and BOY did it not disappoint.

What would you do to become rich and powerful? Dez wants to get into the fashion world but after hundreds of job rejections and no one taking her seriously due to her financial background, she decides to try to get ahead in a different way. She pretends to date Patrick Ruskin to get access to his mother, THE woman at Noveau magazine. But when she’s invited to their private Island for Easter, things aren’t what they seem. What dark secrets is this family hiding? And can Dez make it through this weekend alive?

I have never read more inventive ways of murder IN MY LIFE. The horrifying imagery and complex characters are really what made this story unputdownable. I have determined after reading both Bloom and this book in a day that Dawson will now become an autobuy author for me.

If you are someone who likes Horror, this is the book for you. It’s graphic, challenges the ideals of the 1%, and creates characters you absolutely hate and others you really wanna root for. I will be recommending this to ALL of my horror book friends!

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Guillotine has the right spirit (eat the rich, all day and every day), but its execution was not for me. I was surprised at the length of this book, the sudden violence, and the lack of development from our characters, especially Dez. I understand that there’s a dark humor to the book and the deaths, but it felt so sudden. It also wasn’t cathartic because I didn’t get the space to hate these characters the way I should’ve. I definitely see why Ready or Not was used as a comp title, but Guillotine is nowhere as fun as that movie and is more preachy, which unfortunately made this book a slog to get through.

I did enjoy The Violence by Delilah S. Dawson though I thought it went on for too long, and I do look forward to what she does next, but Guillotine doesn’t successfully hit either the fun and campy horror or the serious commentary on the horrors of the wealthy.

Thanks to NetGalley and Titan Books for an ARC in exchange for my honest review!

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This was fine! It was fast-paced and interesting. I wouldn't say the narrative voice was particularly captivating, and the themes and plot were extremely obvious and unsubtle, which is to some degree expected in satire, but quite literally nothing interesting or new was revealed. There isn't any depth or complexity. I will say I was irked by the narrator's insistence that the character who assaulted his brothers was gay—rape isn't about sexual orientation or desire but power, control, and abuse. Anyone can rape anyone and it isn't an expression of identity. There was no reason for the "beard" line.

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For a lot of people this is going to be a cathartic and vindictive read, for me this was a pretty interesting drop in the bucket of stories like this.

I think the marketing of likening this book to both "Ready or Not" and "Glass Onion" is a disservice to the novel. It makes the compelling and interestingly planned out setting feel retooled and lesser.

Wish I liked the protagonist more. Normally I enjoy a good morally gray character but something about the way Dez is written makes me a lot less sympathetic to her then I probably should be. Despite that I did enjoy her character arc.

We hardly know the sins of the characters before they atone so it makes each bloody moment feel more like hollow preaching played overtop a Saw trap scene.

The best way to describe who's going to enjoy this book more would be fans of the YouTube show Kill Count on the Dead Meat channel. Lot's of kills with specific clairity as to how/why they died.

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Sharp, sinister and wantonly violent. This is a recommended purchase for collections where horror, thrillers, and Dawson's previous titles are popular.

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