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Always Packed for Adventure!

It's the destination and the journey.

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Book Review- Riley Sager's The House Across the Lake

Thank you to NetGalley and Penguin Group Dutton for a copy of Riley Sager’s The House Across the Lake.

Famed actress Casey Fletcher is an alcoholic, who recently lost her husband in a tragic accident. Her trauma from the loss, along with the drinking, caused her to lose a steady acting job, prompting her family to exile her to the family lake house in a bid to get her to “dry-out” and consider her future. This house has been in Casey’s family for generations and it happens to be on the lake where her husband drowned months earlier. Having no intentions of quitting alcohol, Casey enlists a long-time neighbor to keep her supplied and to keep his mouth shut.

As Casey drinks away her days, she uses binoculars to spy on the new neighbors across the lake; a tech tycoon and his wife, a glamorous mode named Katherine. When Katherine blacks-out during a swim on the lake, Casey saves her, and she begins to suspect that Katherine is involved in an abusive relationship. The more Casey spies on her neighbors, the more her suspicions grow.

This was my first novel by Riley Sager, an author that I had long been interested in reading. I’ve found Sager’s books shelved in the mystery section of bookstores, but this one blends genres, including suspense, horror, and mystery. If pressed, I would shelve it in horror. It’s a mix of Hitchcock’s Rear Window and Blatty’s The Exorcist. Casey’s alcoholism and role of unreliable narrator are reminiscent of the protagonist in Paula Hawkin’s novel, The Girl on the Train. The mix of genres work,, especially in concert with Sager’s quick pacing and atmospheric setting. The House Across the Lake is unsettling and creepy, the type of suspense where you are cringing when the protagonist decides to open the wrong door or enter a dark basement. It’s a visceral reading experience.

I enjoyed The House Across the Lake and look forward to reading Sager’s previous works.

tags: The House Across The Lake Riley Sager, The House Across The Lake book Review, Riley Sager Author, Riley Sager Novels, Is Riley Sager Horror, Is Riley Sager Mystery, NetGalley, Penguin Group Dutton, Casey Fletcher character, Books with Unreliable Narrators, Books with Alcoholic Characters, Like Rear Window, Like The Exorcist, Like The Girl on the Train, Best Novels 2022, Casey Fletcher The House Across the Lake, Katherine The House Across the Lake, Novels About Demon Possession, Riley Sager 2022, Novels Set on Lakes, Fast Paced Novels, Stories in Isolated Locations, Novels About Grieving, Bookseller recommendations
categories: Book Review, Read
Saturday 07.23.22
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

Book Review- Lisa Jewell's I Found You

 

Thank you to Atria Books for providing me with an advanced copy of Lisa Jewell's novel, I Found You, in exchange for an honest review.

PLOT- Single mom, Alice Lake, notices a man sitting on the beach in front of her home. He stares off into the ocean, while the rain pours down on him, and he doesn't move for hours. Finally, overcome by a sense of compassion and curiosity, Alice goes to check on him. The man has lost his memory and does not have identification. He only knows that somehow he has a link to this seaside village in the north of England. Alice takes him in and he convinces her to hold off on going to the police, to see if he can recover his memories; memories that seem to point to something sinister. 

In a London suburb, Lily, a new bride, is worried when her husband does not return home from work. Lily has recently moved from the Ukraine and she has never met her husband's family. Not only has she never met them, but she does not have their contact information. Could Lily's husband be the man on the beach? 

LIKE- Last year I read Jewell's novel, The Girls in the Garden, and it was fabulous. I was thrilled when her latest novel, I Found You, showed up for request on NetGalley. It did not disappoint. 

I Found You is filled with unexpected twists. I truly did not anticipate where the story was heading, making it a page-turner. I blazed through it in less than a day, unable to put it down. To this end, I'm not going to discuss any specific plot points or characters, as with this novel, more than most, I think the thrill is in the mystery. I don't want to inadvertently spoil anything for a would-be reader.

In addition to a nail-bitting plot (and intense action sequences), Jewell has memorable characters and a vivid setting. What sticks with me the most is her atmospheric writing and foreboding settings. There is a mansion that is downright creepy. The strong sense of place, coupled with the excitement of the mystery, really grounded me in the story world. I read the last quarter of the novel on my Kindle in a dark room, and I was very relieved to have my husband in bed next to me. I had trouble getting to sleep last night!

DISLIKE- Nothing. After finishing I Found You, I looked up Jewell, and was thrilled to see that she has written many other books. I can't wait to read through her works.

RECOMMEND- YES!!! I enthusiastically recommend both I Found You and The Girls in the Garden. I saw mention of comparisons to Gillian Flynn's Gone Girl, and Paula Hawkin's The Girl on the Train : no slight to either book, I enjoyed them, but I enjoyed both of Jewell's novels even more! She's a masterful storyteller.

tags: Lisa Jewell Author, Lisa Jewell Atria Books, The Girls in The Garden by Lisa Jewell, I Found You Lisa Jewell Book Review, Alice Lake Author, Like Gone Girl, Like Gillian Flynn, Like Paula Hawkins, Like The Girl on the Train, Best Novels 2017 I Found You, Best Mystery Writers Lisa Jewell, Novels Set in England, Novels Set in England Seaside, Atmospheric Novels, Creepy Novels, Novels with Surprising Twists, Netgalley
categories: Read
Tuesday 04.25.17
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

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