

My only complaint is one particular line from the narrator. But it's entertaining so I'll roll with it. The villain doesn't know about the time loop, so it's a bit of a stretch to see how they kill Tree every single time. It's interesting to see how she tries to live (barricading herself, chasing down suspects, attacking the convict, etc) through her iterations. It finally ends when she finds out who keeps killing her. The main character learns a little more with each loop until it ends with her murder every day. This includes one of my favourite tv shows Day Break (from 2006) which nobody else has ever heard of apparently. The second is when the loop ends when you solved a mystery. This includes movies like groundhog day edge of tomorrow and poor dean winchester in Supernatural.

The first is when you go through 100s of loops waiting for it to end. I've found there are two main kinds of time loops. I love time loop stories, so I'm definitely biased in favour of the story. I picked this book up when I saw the trailer for the movies. But when she wakes up on her same birthday and an all-new psychopath in a mask is out to kill her and her friends, she's going to find out that all the rules have changed.

Tree Gelbman thought she'd finally lived to see a brand-new day. Happy Death Day 2U picks up the story without missing a beat. It's a Groundhog Day situation, only with murder, guns, and mean girls, and Tree's only shot at living to see the next day is to relive the day of her murder, over and over, until she discovers her killer's identity.

until she's hunted down and wakes up, again, and again. And then she wakes up in a stranger's bed, it's September 18, and she has to live it all over again. It's also the last day of her life, ending when she's killed by a psychotic killer with a knife. In Happy Death Day, Teresa "Tree" Gelbman's birthday is the worst day of her life, starting when she wakes up in a stranger's bed. The official novelization of the #1 smash hit film Happy Death Day and its sequel Happy Death Day 2U, from Blumhouse ( Split, Get Out, The Purge franchise) and Universal Pictures.
