Review: Katzenjammer by Francesca Zappia

Katzenjammer Published by Greenwillow Books on June 2022
Genres: Young Adult
Pages: 304
Format: eBook
Source: Publisher
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3.5 Stars

From acclaimed author Francesca Zappia, American Horror Story meets the dark comedy of Kafka’s The Metamorphosis as Cat searches for a way to escape her high school. Katzenjammer is a tale of family, love, tragedy, and masks—the ones others make for us, and the ones we make for ourselves. Eerie and thought-provoking, this novel will haunt fans of Chelsie Pitcher’s This Lie Will Kill You and E. Lockhart’s We Were Liars. Features illustrations by the author throughout.

Cat lives in her high school. She never leaves, and for a long time her school has provided her with everything she needs. But now things are changing. The hallways contract and expand along with the school’s breathing, and the showers in the bathroom run a bloody red. Cat’s best friend is slowly turning into cardboard, and instead of a face, Cat has a cat mask made of her own hardened flesh.

Cat doesn’t remember why she is trapped in her school or why half of them—Cat included—are slowly transforming. Escaping has always been the one impossibility in her school’s upside-down world. But to save herself from the eventual self-destruction all the students face, Cat must find the way out. And to do that, she’ll have to remember what put her there in the first place.

Told in chapters alternating between the past and the present, Francesca Zappia weaves a spine-tingling, suspenseful, and haunting story about tragedy and the power of memories. Much like the acclaimed Eliza and Her Monsters, Katzenjammer features black-and-white illustrations by the author throughout the novel. Fans of Marieke Nijkamp’s This Is Where It Ends and Karen McManus’s One of Us Is Lying will lose themselves in the pages of this novel—or maybe in the treacherous hallways of the school

This book is hard to review. I don’t want to give too much away.

On one hand, it’s very creatively well done. I really felt the thrill and urgency through the entire book. It jumps between Cat’s life as the being she is now, (cat face, no eyes) to before when she was a high school student. Now she’s trapped in her high school with others, some who have changed and other who are still themselves. She slowly remembers what brought them together and what has trapped them.

I loved going back and forth, trying to figure it out who became who (Laserbeams? Time?) and how Cat became stuck in her high school.  There’s a lot of thrilling action, being chased for their lives through the school, the school itself taking on a life of its own. I think it was very creatively done and well written.

Which bring me to the other hand.

On the other hand, even though the weirdness is good and compelling, it didn’t lead to a particularly satisfying ending. I didn’t guess the reason they were stuck, or what brought them to that, but it didn’t seem like it meshed. And then it was over.

I think it was a fast read. I liked the horror/strangeness of the story. Zappia writes well and really pulls the reader in quickly and by the throat.

But I guess the ending was mediocre for me and that brought it down a star.