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NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH

Superb characters headline this chilling, slow-burn crime tale.

Awards & Accolades

Our Verdict

  • Our Verdict
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An idyllic small American town may hide a seedy underbelly in this thriller.

Scott Casey and his parents have lived in Ridgeport, Illinois, since 1986. It’s a veritable utopia, crime-free and abundant in neighbors who greet folks with a smile. That’s not by accident; residents must abide by copious rules lest they suffer fines or lose their “residency cards” that give them discounts at local stores. Scott is a mere 10 years old in ’96 when he first gets an inkling that Ridgeport isn’t so squeaky clean. While the town hasn’t seen any murders, a few people have mysteriously disappeared. When someone Scott knows vanishes years later, he and his best friend, Matt Norris, focus their suspicions on Matt’s mom, Sue Ellen. She created and heads the Neighborhood Watch Committee but may not be as stable as she appears in public. The boys desperately want to know what’s in her secret room in the basement—one so secure they’ll need to manipulate a fingerprint scanner to get inside. But neither friend can anticipate what lies beyond that door. Kenealy gradually builds suspense in a story that spans a couple of decades. The tale begins in the ’80s as Scott’s mother, Loretta, seems to fall under Sue Ellen’s spell. But the narrative teases the 2004 date of Ridgeport’s first homicide and works its way to that fateful year. The author’s largely unadorned prose aptly details the town’s centurylong history as well as its fat “residency book” (required reading for newcomers). Kenealy also wisely focuses on the cast. Young Scott’s rebellious acts form an enjoyable coming-of-age subplot that includes an episode in which he and his friends sneak alcoholic drinks at a wedding. But no character outshines Sue Ellen; even readers can’t be sure what the dubious woman has actually done. The revealing final act drops more than one surprise as it deftly cranks up the tension.

Superb characters headline this chilling, slow-burn crime tale.

Pub Date: Feb. 14, 2022

ISBN: 979-8-98520-980-8

Page Count: 392

Publisher: Bowker

Review Posted Online: April 11, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2022

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HOME BEFORE DARK

A return to form for this popular author.

Spectral danger and human evil stalk Sager’s latest stalwart heroine.

When Maggie Holt’s father, Ewan, dies, she’s shocked to discover that she has inherited Baneberry Hall. Ewan made his name as a writer—and ruined her life—by writing a supposedly nonfiction account of the terrors their family endured while living in this grand Victorian mansion with a dark history. Determined to find out the truth behind her father’s sensational bestseller, Maggie returns to Baneberry Hall. Horror aficionados will feel quite cozy as they settle into this narrative, and Sager’s fans will recognize a familiar formula. As he has in his previous three novels, the author makes contemporary fiction out of time-honored tropes. Final Girls (2017) remains his most fresh and inventive novel, but his latest is significantly more satisfying than the two novels that followed. Interspersing Maggie’s story with chapters from her father’s book, Sager delivers something like a cross between The Haunting of Hill House and The Amityville Horror with a tough female protagonist. Ewan and Maggie both behave with the dogged idiocy common among people who buy haunted houses, but doubt about the veracity of Ewan’s book and Maggie’s desperate need to understand her own past make them both compelling characters. The ghosts and poltergeist activity Sager conjures are truly chilling, and he does a masterful job of keeping readers guessing until the very end. As was the case with past novels, though—especially The Last Time I Lied (2018)—Sager sets his story in the present while he seems to be writing about the past. For example, when the Holt family moved into Baneberry Hall in 1995 or thereabouts, Ewan—a professional journalist—worked on a typewriter. When Maggie wants to learn more about the history of Baneberry Hall, she drives to the town library instead of going online. Sager is already asking readers to suspend disbelief, and he makes that more difficult because it’s such a jolt when a character pulls out an iPhone or mentions eBay. This is, however, a minor complaint about what is a generally entertaining work of psychological suspense.

A return to form for this popular author.

Pub Date: June 30, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-5247-4517-2

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Dutton

Review Posted Online: March 29, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2020

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THE SEARCH PARTY

An engrossing, twisty read.

An idyllic glamping weekend in Cornwall turns nightmarish in Richell’s tense thriller.

It’s the May Day holiday weekend. Max and Annie Kingsley have invited old college friends Dominic Davies, Kira de Silva, Jim Miller, and Suze Miller, along with their families, down to the Cornish coast for the soft launch of their new Wildernest glamping business. Not long before, much to the surprise of the old gang, the couple abandoned their London careers as successful architects in search of a quieter life with Kip, their adopted 12-year-old son. The six friends had last seen each other at Kira’s 40th birthday party more than a year earlier, and unresolved tensions raised by Kira’s angry meltdown that night simmer beneath the surface of a cheery reunion. But after Dominic violently breaks up an altercation between Kip and Phoebe, his 6-year-old daughter, over a purloined marshmallow, the mood among the adults darkens along with the weather. Ominous clouds soon break into a ferocious storm that cuts the group off from outside help just as secrets are revealed and one of the party's members disappears. While this scenario has been used many times before (see Sean Dolittle’s Device Free Weekend, 2023), Richell’s fifth novel cleverly plants numerous red herrings and skillfully juggles the multiple points of view and timelines to build white-knuckled suspense and keep readers guessing. The wild Cornish landscape adds to the eerie mood. With the character of Kip, the author could easily have relied on the troubled-adoptee-who-wants-to-destroy-his-family trope but instead, she draws a sensitive portrait of an abused, misunderstood child and the adoptive parents who struggle to love him.

An engrossing, twisty read.

Pub Date: Jan. 16, 2024

ISBN: 9781668036068

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Atria

Review Posted Online: Oct. 25, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2023

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