In Rodger’s thriller, a serial rapist terrorizes Ontario, attacking women and upending lives—until his victims plot revenge.
This narrative is loosely based on aspects of the Scarborough Rapist case, one of the most disturbing in Canadian history, pitting a collection of young women against a perpetrator whose criminal acts threaten to destroy their futures. In 1989, high school student Samantha meets an intoxicating hockey player named Andy (“He drove a motorcycle and lived his life on the edge, a little wild, never wanting to follow the rules”). Things take a horrible turn when Andy rapes her. He disappears, and Sam learns she is pregnant. When Liz meets Blake, she is impressed by his charm and work ethic, so much so that the two are engaged within a year. Liz was planning to go away to college, and her parents convince her to do just that (and marry Blake afterward). But several disturbing comments from him give her pause. Jenny, a high school theater kid, is distressed by the news of the Scarborough Rapist but figures she’s safer since she just got a car. However, she is raped in that car one night, and the aspiring dancer is left with a broken foot. Despondent after the assault, Jenny forsakes her dream of being a physician and decides to become a psychologist instead. Oscillating between youthful optimism and intense fear, these women eventually must come together to share the truth of what happened to them and bring down the responsible party. Rodger’s concise novel wisely avoids exploiting the real-life story by giving the fictional players some distance from it. The web of lies and deceit that is woven here is complex, and the action plays out over many years. There are a lot of characters, and it requires careful reading to follow the plot over the short chapters, which can bounce around in time. All becomes crystal clear toward the end, though, and the novel works well as a testament to the resilience of survivors.
A bold, no-nonsense story about young women dealing with and overcoming sexual assault.