Imaginary Friend
Imaginary Friend book cover

Imaginary Friend

Paperback – October 6, 2020

Price
$11.25
Format
Paperback
Pages
736
Publisher
Grand Central Publishing
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1538731352
Dimensions
5.25 x 1.15 x 8 inches
Weight
1.25 pounds

Description

THE INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER One of Fall 2019's Best Books ( People, EW, LitHub, Vox, Bustle, Washington Post, Associated Press, and more) "Twenty years after his smash hit novel, The Perks of Being a Wallflower , Stephen Chbosky returns. . . an ambitious tale narrated through multiple perspectives, mashing together horror, fairy tales and the (rewritten) Bible. . . But Chbosky's true skill is in turning a book of absolute horrors -- both fantastical and real -- into an uplifting yarn. [This is] a book about so much -- fate, destiny, redemption, power. . . Chbosky has his eye firmly on humanity."― New York Times Book Review " Imaginary Friend is an all-out, not-for-the-fainthearted horror novel, one of the most effective and ambitious of recent years. . . To be sure, the underlying sensibility that characterized 'Wallflower' is present in the new book, particularly in its empathetic portraits of people struggling to recover from personal tragedy. . . Perhaps its most impressive aspect is the confidence with which Chbosky deploys the more fantastical elements of his complex narrative. . . A very human story with universal implications."― Washington Post "Chbosky's horror writing stands on its own. . . a gleeful meditation. . . the nine years Chbosky reportedly spent writing the book shows in his well-crafted scares, snappy pacing and finely turned plot. Imaginary Friend is well worth the time for those who dare."― TIME Magazine An epic work of horror. . . Ambitious and compulsively readable. . . a Grand Guignol exploration of what it means to have faith, even in the face of absolute hopelessness. . . His willingness to pursue and present answers to such meaningful queries is what elevates Imaginary Friend from a more than competent attempt at the horror genre to a formidable work on par with other genre operas that also tackle spiritual matters, like Stephen King's 1978 behemoth 'The Stand' or Justin Cronin's 'The Passage' trilogy. Imaginary Friend is a book that far outstrips the expectations of his chosen genre. . . a book full of it's own light."― Pittsburgh Post-Gazette "A haunting and thrilling novel pulsing with the radical empathy that makes Chbosky's work so special."― John Green, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Fault in Our Stars "Like The Perks of Being a Wallflower , Imaginary Friend says that no matter how dark the places you have been or the things you have seen, no one and nothing and nowhere is beyond redemption. What is astonishing and laugh-out-loud genius is that Chbosky has disguised all this wisdom in an entertaining thriller. In true Stephen Chbosky style, he gives you the bran and the doughnut. Spiritual enlightenment and horror. I don't know how he did it. But he did it. It's a masterpiece."― Emma Watson, actor and activist "If you aren't blown away by the first fifty pages of Imaginary Friend , you need to get your sense of wonder checked."― Joe Hill, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Fireman and NOS4A2 "If you grew up reading The Perks of Being a Wallflower , you won't want to miss this spooky, surreal thriller. . . You'll feel locked in the battle between good and evil as Kate and Christopher fight for their lives."― Good Housekeeping "A creepy horror yarn that would do Stephen King proud. . . The reader will want to be sure that no one is hiding behind the chair. . . That's the nature of a good scary story -- and this one is excellent. A pleasing book for those who like to scare themselves silly, one to read with the lights on and the door bolted."― Kirkus "Reminiscent of the epic novels of Stephen King. . . With multiple points of view that probe the thoughts and nightmares of characters from all over town, this is an immersive read that walks the line between dark fantasy and horror [and] reads like a season of Stranger Things . . . [ Imaginary Friend ] will sell itself to readers who have waited twenty years for a new novel from Chbosky ( The Perks of Being a Wallflower , 1999), but horror fans will also be curious. A big, scary book."― Booklist "An unputdownable, extraordinary book. Stephen Chbosky manages to combine the heart and emotion that suffuses all of his work with Stephen King chills. The pages practically turn themselves."― Greer Hendrick & Sarah Pekkanen, #1 New York Times bestselling authors of The Wife Between Us and An Anonymous Girl "Sure, this unputdownable book is the scariest thing I've read in a long time. Mysterious woods. Evil forces. Unseen worlds. But it's also, like everything Chbosky does, imbued with heart and soul. You'll fall in love with these characters. That's why they stay with you, like a haunting."― R. J. Palacio, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Wonder " Imaginary Friend is a sprawling epic horror novel that hearkens back to the classics of 1970s Golden Age, but, like Stranger Things , with a twinkle in its malevolent eye. Enormous, scary fun."― Dan Choan, bestselling author of Ill Will " Imaginary Friend has bee a long time coming. And like a fine Bordeaux, it rewards that wait in countless ways. This is a fearsome, remarkably ambitious novel that breaks through the boundaries of the horror genre to become epic -- in all the best senses of the word."― Lincoln Child, #1 New York Times bestselling coauthor of Verses for the Dead and City of Endless Night " Imaginary Friend is simply extraordinary reading experience -- it reminded me of discovering a classic Stephen King novel from two decades ago, but all funneled through Chbosky's utterly unique style. A tremendous read, every bit worth the wait."― Blake Crouch, New York Times bestselling author of A Dark Matter "With Imaginary Friend , Stephen Chbosky has written another classic, setting a new high watermark for fantasy horror. It is the greatest story ever told of love and salvation in which a little child shall save them. It is as spine-tingling sinister as a Stephen King tome, as ghastly as any ghost story by Peter Straub, as gothic as any Neil Gaiman title. It should become a horror perennial, taken out at Halloween and Christmas or any other time a reader wants a proper fight."― Washington Independent "Chbosky brings deep humanity to his characters and creates genuinely unsettling tableaux, including a nightmarish otherworld that Christopher accesses via his treehouse."― Publishers Weekly "You won't want to miss this spooky, surreal thriller."― Good Housekeeping "The author of Perks of Being a Wallflower goes full Stephen King in his new supernatural thriller of epic proportions. . . This is my kind of Christmas novel!"― LitHub "This is an immersive read. . . With its highly precocious young hero, the novel reads like a season of Stranger Things ."― Booklist "It's not just horror that Stephen Chbosky is tackling: it's religion, too [which] makes the world-building all the more richer...not a light read, but it is a thrilling one."― Variety Stephen Chbosky is the author of the multi-million-copy bestselling debut novel The Perks of Being a Wallflower . In 2012, Chbosky wrote and directed an acclaimed film adaptation of his novel, starring Logan Lerman, Emma Watson and Ezra Miller. He also directed the acclaimed 2017 film Wonder starring Julia Roberts, Owen Wilson and Jacob Tremblay. Imaginary Friend is Chbosky's long-awaited second novel.

Features & Highlights

  • A young boy is haunted by a voice in his head in this acclaimed, bestselling epic of literary horror from the author of
  • The Perks of Being a Wallflower
  • .
  • O
  • ne of The Year's Best Books (
  • People, EW, Lithub, Vox, Washington Post,
  • and more)
  • We can swallow our fear or let our fear swallow us.
  • Single mother Kate Reese is on the run. Determined to improve life for her and her son, Christopher, she flees an abusive relationship in the middle of the night with her child. Together, they find themselves drawn to the tight-knit community of Mill Grove, Pennsylvania. It's as far off the beaten track as they can get. Just one highway in, one highway out. At first, it seems like the perfect place to finally settle down. Then Christopher vanishes. For six long days, no one can find him. Until Christopher emerges from the woods at the edge of town, unharmed but not unchanged. He returns with a voice in his head only he can hear, with a mission only he can complete: Build a treehouse in the woods by Christmas, or his mother and everyone in the town will never be the same again. Twenty years ago, Stephen Chbosky's
  • The Perks of Being a Wallflower
  • made readers everywhere feel infinite. Now, Chbosky has returned with an epic work of literary horror, years in the making, whose grand scale and rich emotion redefine the genre. Read it with the lights on.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(1.3K)
★★★★
25%
(1.1K)
★★★
15%
(648)
★★
7%
(302)
23%
(995)

Most Helpful Reviews

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sooooo baaaaad

Chbosky’s “The Perks of Being a Wallflower” was absolutely brilliant, but that was over 20 years ago. “Imaginary Friend” is a 705-page encyclopedia of horrible similes (“The breeze outside was charcoal-sweet, like cotton candy barbecued on an open spit”), clichés (“quiet as a mouse,” “light as a feather,” and crowds parting “like the Red Sea”—twice!), and a nearly 300-page “climax” that should’ve ended 250 pages sooner. By the time I got to the end of the book, I didn’t care anymore. I just wanted the nightmare to end, even more than the heroes in the book did.

I can’t believe these problems, along with the superfluous scenes and storylines, sophomoric writing style, and trite sappiness got by an editor of any quality. Unforgivable. The hokey Christian theme made you wish you were in hell (which would have proven more enjoyable than reading this book).

For many years, I have routinely read 1 – 2 books per week. I know novels, and this one is absolutely dreadful. Buy it only for someone you really don’t like.
3 people found this helpful
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Has Chbosky ever met a woman? Or a child?

Cause it sure doesn’t seem so the way he writes his characters. This book had me feeling the way I imagine Sisyphus feels hauling a huge boulder up a steep hill every day. Tedious, pointless, and nothing ever really leads to anything.
2 people found this helpful
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My new favorite book!

I came across this book at Books A Million, and bought it going on the cover alone. Before I even read it, like an idiot, I came on here and looked at the bad reviews. Despite the face that a lot of people didn’t like this book, I decided to form my own opinion and read it. I’ve never read a book so quickly in my life, nor have I ever been so hooked by one. I am an atheist, and the religious tie in did not bother me one bit. This book was perfect. I loved every character and everything about it. I was sad when it was over. It was fun, creepy, and all around well written. A lot of people complained about the book being so long, but again, I feel like it was just long enough. This will go on my shelf at home, where it will stay until I want to read it again one day. This quickly became my favorite book for sure.
1 people found this helpful
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Daunting

The overall idea was great, however it seemed too long and drawn out. I found it to be repetitive, and felt like it could have ended sooner.
1 people found this helpful
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WTF does this book have to do with the problem of middle east refugees?

Seriously, I can't even count how many times the author mentions the problem of middle east refugees. It's so many that it is noticeable, and distracting. Perhaps yet another attempt by an author to pollute their prose with political platitudes? Maybe, maybe not. Who am I to say? But it had NOTHING to do with the story. Just a repetitive non-sequitur that served no purpose other than the author's agenda. Otherwise, it's a pretty ok horror story; if a bit derivative, with some flaws mentioned by many others. I appreciate books that escape the 336 page formula that so much popular fiction is beholden to; especially horror and mystery/thrillers. It allows the author to be more "literary", with more descriptive language, and to explore aspects like character and setting with much more depth; rather than just focusing on moving the plot forward. But the author should be careful not to get TOO long winded lest it should detract from that. Might be this one could be shorter (just not 336 pages).
1 people found this helpful
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If you don't want to be force fed Christianity, skip it.

The beginning of the book is really good, it grabbed me right away. Pretty soon it starts to barrel full speed at the good vs evil, god vs the devil trope and I really wish I had known that. The writing becomes weak about midway through, the author doesn't even try to hide the religious undertones anymore and it becomes sexist and condescending. The book is also overly long, You could remove about a third of the book and still maintain the story.
1 people found this helpful
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Started out good but lost its way

The book started out really interesting and I was excited to keep reading and see where things went. As the boom progressed things became repetitive and stagnant, I felt as if there was no real plan or story line. In the end I found myself speed reading/skimming the last quarter of the book just to get to the end. I wouldn’t recommend this book and I rarely write reviews but I feel compelled to share my experience with this one.
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Mind-blowing! One of my new favorite books!

Wow! This book. This. Book. This might officially be one of my favorite books ever. It was mind-blowing, powerful, moving, and horrifying at times. I don't want to give too much away because you should really experience it all yourself without knowing what comes next, but it's about a boy (only 7 years old!), Christopher, who moves to a small town outside Pittsburgh (as someone who lived in Pittsburgh for over 13 years, I appreciate all the Pittsburgh references) and when he goes into the Mission Street Woods, he goes missing for 6 days. When he returns, he comes back changed, and builds a tree house with his friends in the woods, which allows him to meet an imaginary friend, "the nice man," and cross over into the imaginary side of the world. He then ends up in the role of having to save his town, and the world, from a great evil. I won't say anything more than that because you've got to read it to believe it. There are plenty of twists and turns too that will knock you for a loop. The story itself is very original and imaginative, but I think the thing I appreciate the most about this book is the spiritual allegory and messages, which are quite profound. This is a long book, but you'll devour every page, and then wish there was still more once you finish. Do yourself a favor and read it!
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Re-do.

My first review of this was a little mean. Because I just finished it and well... it was an investment.
But to put it simply... if my time were more valuable during night shift, I'd likely stay mad. It wasn't good.
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Keeps you wanting to read more

I never knew which direction this book was going to go. When I thought I had it figured out, it changed. Some things were predictable, while others blindsided me.

This book was a slow burn all the way through. Every time I finished a chapter, I wondered how the book could keep going. What story was there left to tell? But the story did keep going, and there was much more to tell.

I liked the way the author moved from character to character so the reader could see the whole picture. The mystery of the imaginary world and the imaginary friend was expertly revealed through multiple viewpoints. The characters were all interconnected in the master plan that saw the imaginary world spill into the real one. The reader had a unique viewpoint of seeing both sides through the main character, Christopher, who after going missing for six days, had new powers that let him drift between worlds.

This book covers good versus evil. Light versus dark. The never ending story of the fight for your soul. The author told the story of each character and their internal struggle with their own personal hell. Then he put them in hell to suffer the same day over and over again for all eternity. The creepy mailbox characters would make excellent additions in silent hill. The savagery in which characters maim each other keeps this book in the horror genre.

I thought this book would never end. I did think it was too long and that about 30 chapters could have been cut or sped up. But I never wanted to stop reading. I wanted the details, yet desperately wanted to reach the end to make sure I could rid myself of the monstrous things done in this book.