Friday, January 20, 2023

What Lies in the Woods

My January Book of the Month selection was What Lies in the Woods by Kate Alice Marshall (the other options were Age of Vice by Deepti Kapoor, Lunar Love by Lauren Kung Jessen, Queen of Thieves by Beezy Marsh, Hell Bent by Leigh Bardugo, The Reunion by Kayla Olson, and Independence by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni). I already pre-ordered Hell Bent, the long-awaited sequel to Ninth House, months ago so I decided to go with the thriller and I'm glad that I did because I couldn't put it down! Twenty-two years ago in a small town in the Pacific Northwest, three eleven-year-old girls with vivid imaginations spend the summer in the woods role-playing their favorite stories from mythology in secret. Later that summer Naomi is brutally attacked by a serial killer and barely survives but, when he is caught, she and her friends Olivia and Cassidy provide the evidence that convicts Allan Michael Stahl. In the present, Naomi learns that Stahl has died in prison and, rather than providing a sense of relief, this bring up long repressed memories of the attack. She travels back to her hometown to reconnect with her friends and Olivia is distraught over the fact that the three of them have not been entirely honest and may have sent an innocent man to prison. Olivia wants to tell the truth but, when she disappears, it turns out that all three women have been keeping even more secrets about that day in the woods. This novel is incredibly suspenseful and the tension never lets up until the dramatic conclusion back in the woods. Even though I guessed one of the big reveals pretty early on, I was completely blindsided on several occasions with all of the twists and turns. I really enjoyed the structure because the narrative uses flashbacks to provide incremental details about the central mystery and this is very effective because I had to keep reading well into the night to find out what happened. I also really liked Naomi as the main protagonist and I think her character is very well-developed, particularly in regards to how the trauma she suffered as a child has informed the person she has become and the decisions, which are not always rational, she makes. My only complaint is that some of the secondary characters are not as well-developed and I sometimes lost track of them but that didn't detract from my enjoyment. Ultimately, this is a riveting psychological thriller and I recommend it to fans of the genre.

Note:  This is the first foray into adult fiction by this author but, as a fan of YA fiction, I might try to find some of her earlier works because I like her style.

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