How to Kill a Guy in Ten Dates by Shailee Thompson

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How to Kill a Guy in Ten Dates by Shailee Thompson

Romance

How to Kill a Guy in Ten Dates

Debut

by Shailee Thompson

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Quick take

Two friends learn just how dangerous the dating pool is when a speed-dating event turns deadly. Swoon, laugh, kill.

Good to know

  • Illustrated icon, Female_Friendship

    Female friendships

  • Illustrated icon, Movieish

    Movieish

  • Illustrated icon, Whodunit

    Whodunit

  • Illustrated icon, Salacious

    Salacious

Synopsis

When Jamie Prescott and her best friend Laurie attend a speed-dating event, Jamie expects to meet a roster of mediocre men and indulge in some street food afterwards. She doesn’t expect one of her dates to have his throat slit at their table during a blackout. After the lights come back on and there are more bodies on the floor, it becomes clear that dating can be a very dangerous pastime.

Armed with makeshift weapons and Jamie’s extensive knowledge of what NOT to do in a slasher, the remaining speed daters try to find an exit while the killer adds to their body count. As the night progresses and Jamie comes face-to-mask with the murderer, she begins to suspect they are committing the slayings to woo one of the daters and turn them into a real-life Final Girl. But Jamie has other plans, and as she fights for her life, she can’t help but find herself ensconced in a love triangle with two of the other survivors. Will she make it through the bloodshed to find her Happily Ever After? Or does this machete-wielding psychopath have another ending in mind?

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Get an early look from the first pages of How to Kill a Guy in Ten Dates.

How to Kill a Guy in Ten Dates

CHAPTER 1

“I suppose I think about murder more than anyone really should. I am constantly amazed by its sheer power to alter and define our lives.”

—Not The Holiday

All’s Fair in Love and Gore: The Intersection of Romantic Comedies and Slasher Films in the Late Twentieth and Early Twenty-First Centuries

While slasher and rom-com films may draw harsher criticism than other genres, the sociocultural impact of these types of films cannot be understated. There’s a reason they both have a pull at the box office. A reason why, despite the turbulent swing of audience taste and film trends over the years, for every Halloween that’s been produced, there’s been a Julia Roberts–fronted “will they/won’t they” to match (see appendix 1).

From a behavioral standpoint it could be argued that slashers and rom-coms maintain their permanency within the cinema landscape by the way their predictable outcomes appeal to basic instinctual human needs. Coincidentally (or perhaps not), the textbook endings within each genre align with consecutive stages of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs: slashers—safety and security; rom-coms—love and belonging (see appendix 2). Put simply, these films give us something we all inherently want: a life to live and a reason to live it.

However, the inherent structural similarities between these two ostensibly opposed genres suggest far wider applications could be obtained from not just their individual study but a complementary investigation. A more in-depth consideration of these films reveals that they follow an analogous format, one that contains certain rules. If the protagonists follow those rules, they win. In slashers, they live. In rom-coms, they find love. If they don’t follow the rules, they lose. For slashers, that means getting decapitated in some gruesome, yet satisfying, way (often while topless). For a rom-com, losing leads to crying in the rain outside an unrequited love’s house, doomed to be alone and sexless forever. Either of these scenarios could apply to countless classics within the slasher and rom-com repertoire of the late twentieth century. While these films are dismissed in some circles for an apparent lack of depth and a heavy reliance on tropes, audiences continue to come back for more.

Consider this dissertation a genealogical study of slashers and rom-coms; distant cousins stuck in the same generational cycle. Influenced and precast by their predecessors. Destined to repeat the tropes and clichés of their pa—

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Debut authors
View all
Vladimir
The Sun Was Electric Light
Lessons in Chemistry
Dirty Diana
The Bright Years
Shark Heart
Alive Day
Liquid
Maggie; or, A Man and a Woman Walk Into a Bar
More
Honey
Flat Earth
Best Offer Wins
The Wicked
Most Eligible
Crying in H Mart
Passion Project
Black Cake
Count My Lies
Penitence
The Road of Bones
Spitting Gold
The Maid
Weyward
All We Were Promised
The House of My Mother
The Names
Among Friends
Dinner for Vampires
You Between the Lines
A Thousand Times Before
Ariadne
Lunar Love
Aftertaste
The Collected Regrets of Clover
The Days I Loved You Most
The Wives
Here After
The Wishing Game
Did I Ever Tell You?
Middletide
The Teller of Small Fortunes
Northwoods
A Flicker in the Dark
A Short Walk Through a Wide World
The Storm We Made
Neighbors and Other Stories
The Love Hypothesis
Red, White & Royal Blue
Finding Grace
The Other Valley
Hard by a Great Forest
Maame
The Mayor of Maxwell Street
Thistlefoot
The Other Black Girl
Age of Vice
Did You Hear About Kitty Karr?
One Day in December
Paper Names
We Are the Brennans
The Last Russian Doll
Olga Dies Dreaming
She Started It
Bringing Down the Duke
Somebody's Daughter
Beautiful Country
Dearest
Kaikeyi
Love & Other Disasters
The Fortunes of Jaded Women
Sign Here
The Stranger Upstairs
Damnation Spring
The Verifiers
A Little Hope
In Every Mirror She's Black
Taste Makers
Fiona and Jane
Yinka, Where Is Your Huzband?
Camp Zero
The Last Story of Mina Lee
The Final Revival of Opal & Nev
My Body
Honey Girl
Big Friendship
Black Buck
White Ivy
White Horse
Peach Blossom Spring
Behold the Dreamers
The Mothers
The Animators
Marlena
Sharp Objects
The Girl Who Smiled Beads
Small Country
Golden Child
Small Fry
Too Much Is Not Enough
All That You Leave Behind
To the Moon and Back
Leaving the Witness
All of Us with Wings
Frankly in Love
The Stars and the Blackness Between Them
Trick Mirror
The Girl with the Louding Voice
The Love Affairs of Nathaniel P
A Burning
The Boy in the Red Dress
Fleishman Is in Trouble
The Beauty in Breaking
The Comeback
The Prophets
Girl A
What Comes After
Things We Lost to the Water
The Family
The Keeper of Night
Win Me Something
Four Weekends and a Funeral
The Compound
The Man No One Believed
All the Tomorrows After
The Book of Lost Hours
The Second Chance Cinema
Violet Thistlewaite Is Not a Villain Anymore
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Lady Tremaine
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