As soon as I read that Fracture was a debut novel from a Biology
major that formerly worked in biotech, I knew I had to read it. I love the
supernatural and the paranormal, but science definitely has a place in my heart
and its inclusion in Fracture’s plot made it sound intriguing to me. Plus this
was author Megan Miranda’s debut novel and I try to read debuts since I hope to
become published one day myself.
Fracture begins almost immediately with the key plot point.
Delaney Maxwell and Decker Phillips venture out onto the lake, against Delaney’s
better judgment, to avoid taking the long way around to meet up with their
friends. Delaney falls, the ice cracks, and she plunges in, trapped for eleven
minutes before she is rescued. And oh yeah, during that eleven minutes, she
dies. The next time she wakes up, it’s nearly a week later and the doctors can barely
understand how she is even alive, let alone coherent. Her best friend, the
trusty Decker, has been there at her bedside the whole time.
When Delaney goes home, she begins having these strange sensations
within her brain that seem to become stronger when she is around someone who is
close to death. She also comes across Troy Varga, a boy who has survived a similar
traumatic accident with coma, and experiences these strange sensations too. Troy
is a breath of fresh air at first, someone who can relate to what has happened
to Delaney, especially as she discovers that her friends and family are not
dealing with it so well. Troy is more than he seems at first, though, as
Delaney quickly discovers. Ultimately, she wonders if she is just sensing these
deaths or if she has become so wrong in the head that she is actually causing
them.
I don’t want to give away too much of the story that hasn’t
already been offered through other sources, but I would like to say that the
best part of Fracture for me was its character development and emotional ride.
I found the emotions Delaney’s friends, and especially her mother, were dealing
with – emotions that were not always kind and supportive – to be quite
believable. The lines that best summed up this point for me were, “He dragged
me through the house, and I let him, because I wasn’t sure who I was most
scared of at the moment. The stranger I was learning about too quickly, or the
woman I’d known my entire life who was quickly becoming a stranger.” I also
liked the Decker storyline, as I think it reminds us that sometimes you don’t
realize what you have until it’s almost (or is) gone.
The only part that fell short for me was the actual plot. I
would say that 90% of the books I read are some type of Urban Fantasy or have an
otherwise Supernaturally-based plot, but I felt as though this one could have
done without that paranormal twist. This would have been a five star story for
me if it had just been a girl that came out of a traumatic accident alive, and
was forced to deal with her changing relationships. The paranormal element
cheapened that slightly, and also tried to wrap up too quickly. I think if it
had been drawn out or if it had reached a more sensational climax, it would
have worked. That said, I liked the ending as part of a non-paranormal story,
and I thought it made sense.
Overall, I felt Fracture was an interesting and
enjoyable read. I would give it four and a half stars based on its writing and
character development alone. I look forward to reading more novels from Megan
Miranda.