Thought you had a black sheep? Meet Rayelle’s cousin.—Cosmopolitan
An intense, riveting saga of … a girl’s determination to take control.—Kirkus, STARRED REVIEW
Jennifer Pashley’s debut novel The Scamp is pure grit: harsh, unsettling, impossible to ignore and impossible to shake off. . . It’s rare to read about a female serial killer, and Pashley’s debut . . . will become the gold standard.—Bustle
Like
the serial killer in her novel, Pashley takes the damaged bodies and souls of
her characters, narrates to us the intimate details of their lives and the pain
they’ve gone through, and then rebuilds them into gorgeous images of beauty,
redemption, and repair. Then, and only then, are we ready to
experience the dark revelations she has in store for them. —The Toast
Jennifer Pashley’s The Scamp is a slow-burn thriller, a cherry bomb with an eight-inch wick. This is a novel brimming with atmosphere, with gorgeous details, with murder and gore, a smeary canvas portraying the hard-won lives of two broken women. It is a book that will make you have sympathy for the devil. And don’t be fooled: that bomb goes off.
—Lindsay Hunter, author of UGLY GIRLS
Jennifer Pashley’s stunning debut novel is wonderfully colorful and dangerous, following a tough, savvy narrator on a perilous trek toward release from a messy and difficult life, a dead child, a troubled and troubling family. Rayelle Reed mixes it up with and draws sustenance from a motley crew of slightly and more-than-slightly off-center characters, each of whom, in his or her way, adds richness and complexity to the hunt. Pashley writes like an angel who has spent time in parts South, figuratively and literally, and the pleasures of reading her are rich and satisfying.
—Frederick Barthelme, author of There Must Be Some Mistake
The Scamp is knife and velvet, tongue and bone. Its pages smell of pool water, trailer sex, and huffed gasoline; they taste of reservation cigarettes and peaches from the can. Jennifer Pashley tells the brutal, elegiac story of two girls on the move: broken, burning, and so dangerously beautiful.
—Dylan Landis, author of Rainey Royal
Gritty, seductive, and completely mesmerizing, Jennifer Pashley’s . . . novel limns a trail of broken relationships, broken bones, and broken promises. Be warned: these characters bloom so large on the page, you’ll ignore the real world around you until the last tangled secret has been unraveled.
—Shanna Mahin, author of Oh! You Pretty Things