Samantha is part of a highly selective writing program at Warren University. Problem is, she hates her cohort of rich girls, who all call themselves "Bunny" and Samantha hasn't written anything profound since she came Warren. When Samantha becomes entangled with the Bunnies she ends up falling down a deep rabbit hole.
The only way how to review this book is to use quotes from the last part of the book, which sum it's contents up nicely and do it's own critique, because of how difficult this book has been rendered by many readers. Either side claiming it to be amazing, the other not even finishing the book: "I mean I was intrigued at first. Maybe even dazzled. Smitten by a certain grittiness, a certain dark charm." "- it isn't giving itself to us. It's being... Coy." "Unnecessarily inaccessible. Not delivering on its premise." "And it was dazzling premise. -" I admit I was dazzled by the cover and as said: by the premise. After the first chapters I had to fight the plot and nightmares inside the story, however, you can only agree with how well the book is at descriptions and internal turmoil. By the end, I would have been fairly disappointed, if it had not been for the internal review and me coming to an understanding that the book itself just explained why and how it was written like that. For that I was able to check it off my list of dark academia novels, and will only recommend it to horror enthusiasts, warn animal lovers and creative geniuses to not digest it at once.