Monday, January 25, 2021

The Survivors

I have been toying with joining the Book of the Month subscription service for a long time and, since it is a new year, I decided to go for it! Every month I get to pick a book from five options (I can also pick add-ons) and then it is delivered to me in a blue box. For my January book I selected The Survivors by Jane Harper (the other options were The Dating Plan by Sara Desai, The Prophets by Robert Jones, Jr., Outlawed by Anna North, and The Removed by Brandon Hobson). I really enjoyed this selection (I read it in two days) because it is incredibly atmospheric and suspenseful. Twelve years ago, two men died and a young girl disappeared during a devastating storm in the small coastal village of Evelyn Bay, Tasmania and no one has really recovered from the trauma. In the present, Kieran Elliott returns with his partner Mia and infant daughter Audrey after a long absence to help his mother and ailing father pack up his childhood home. His visit is fraught with tension because he, along with his parents, friends, and most of the village, holds himself responsible for the tragic accident which claimed his brother and the brother of his best friend. When a young woman is found murdered on the beach, all of the memories of the former incident are stirred up again along with buried secrets, lies, and recriminations. During the murder investigation, new information comes to light about the past which connects all of the deaths and forces Kieran to confront the guilt he has held on to all these years. The narrative alternates between the events of the past and the present and sometimes the timeline is blurred which is extremely effective in creating a sense of unease as the past and present collide. Every single character has a secret and almost everyone is a suspect. Information is revealed little by little (it is definitely a slow-burn) in short chapters which does much to build suspense. Harper is particularly adept at creating a mood with her vivid descriptions of the village, the sea, the caves along the coast, and the remains of a shipwreck and I could almost hear the gulls screeching in the distance, feel the waves lapping at my feet as the tide comes in, taste the salt on the breeze, and experience the terror of walking on the beach alone in the dark and the claustrophobia of being trapped in a cave at high tide.  I also really liked the use of waves advancing and retreating as a metaphor for the secrets that are hidden and revealed in Evelyn Bay. This is more of a character study than a thriller and I was a bit disappointed in the ending because it was so abrupt after the build-up but it kept me reading into the early hours with a palpable sense of foreboding so I would definitely recommend it to fans of mysteries. I can't wait to see what the February selections are!

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