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The middle section drags as the narrator’s introspection turns repetitive. Several dream sequences feel more like filler than revelation, and a subplot involving a neighbor’s antique doll collection never fully earns its place. The climax, while ambitious, resolves too abruptly—leaving more questions than satisfying answers. Some readers may find the ending deliberately ambiguous; others will find it frustrating.
My Pretty Toy is best read as a mood piece rather than a tightly plotted narrative. If you enjoy literary horror or character-driven studies of obsession (think The Little Stranger meets Black Swan ), you’ll find much to admire. If you need clear stakes and a tidy payoff, you might leave disappointed. Teasford has undeniable talent; I just wish she’d trusted her story to breathe without so many ornate detours. My Pretty Toy Nanney Teasford
Nanney Teasford’s My Pretty Toy is a curious blend of childhood memory, adult longing, and psychological unease. The premise is intriguing: an unnamed narrator revisits a beloved toy from her past, only to find that the object has become a mirror for repressed emotions and fractured relationships. The middle section drags as the narrator’s introspection
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