Reviews

Village of the Lost Girls by Agustín Martínez

penguininabluebox's review

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3.0

3.5*

I received a free copy from the publisher through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

While I usually don't mesh too well with adult mysteries or thrillers, this one really intrigued me, which was why I requested it, and I ended up enjoying it quite a bit! It really was quite suspenseful and for me personally I didn't see the ending coming. It was quite creepy too, and the author was able to maintain that creepy atmosphere throughout the book.

theliteraryhooker's review

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4.0

**Review to follow.**

tessa_talbert's review

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3.0

⭐⭐⭐

Two went missing.

One returned.

The search continues

Village of the Lost Girls is a slow-burn, atmospheric small town thriller set in the Spanish village of Monteperdido located in the Pyrenees mountains. The village is shocked at the sudden disappearance of Ana and Lucia, two little girls who vanished seemingly without a trace. Monteperdido mourns their lost children, but five years later Ana suddenly reappears, wounded and worse for wear, but very much alive. Now, questions and secrets threaten to suffocate the people who keep them as they desperately try to find out what happened Lucia and the person that took the girls from them on that fateful day.

This book was translated from its original Spanish (and English readers should give that grace because some of the translation might feel a bit off to us. Just remember translations aren’t always absolute.) but it didn’t take away from the overall haunting, constricting feel of the atmosphere. We follow Sara and her partner, Santiago, as they are tasked to solve this elusive mystery. The town is very close-knit, very protective of each other, and entirely suspicious of these strangers who have infiltrated their home and threaten to unravel secrets long guarded. This tension makes things difficult for Sara and Santiago as they try to uncover the truth.

When I say slow-burn here, I definitely mean it. A 500 page cop procedural is a task for anyone, even fans of the genre. This one dragged in places, raced forth in others, it had all the elements of a good procedural, especially all the conflict with various towns-people. Red-herrings were executed rather well for the most part. You definitely got the feeling that you knew who the culprit was only to be jerked in another direction. Frustrating stuff, but that’s what we love about it.

But they glossed over of the state of Ana’s mental health. She couldn’t remember much, of course, but I really felt she should have been more…taken care of, in that respect. It seemed odd to me that she wouldn’t have gone through counseling at the very least. And there were times it seemed like I really was dragging myself into the next scene. I love a good, tight mystery, but this could be a little hard to follow in terms of the details.

Overall, I think it had plenty of potential and if you don’t mind the “slow descent” type of read, then you’ll likely enjoy this one!

tw for the topic of pedophilia, kidnapping

*My thanks, as always, to Netgalley and the Publisher for gifting me with an ARC in exchange for an honest review.*

artbreakerbookclub's review

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3.0

Thank you to netgalley and Quercus books for providing me with an arc of this book for an honest review.
I love it when a tagline grabs your attention and straight away you know you have to read it: Two went missing. One returned. The hunt for the other begins.

Ana and Lucia were eleven year old friends when they disappeared walking home from school one day. But five years later, Ana is discovered badly injured but alive after a car crash. The race is on to figure out the case and find Lucia, dead or alive.

The book takes place in the Spanish village of Monteperdido "This was a walled village, built to protect itself from outsiders" The village is filled with shady characters, with friends and neighbours turning against one another. And it is up to outsider detective Sara Campos to get under the skin of the villagers and work out who is telling the truth.

The setting of the book, the Spanish Pyrenees mountains felt like another character in the book. The descriptions of the nature, the valleys and gorges, the unforgiving terrain, gave another element to the story. "The two faces of Monteperdido. Within a few weeks, this valley teaming with life would be frozen. Dead. Once the summer ended, the trees would lose their leaves, the river would freeze over, the animals would retreat into the mountains, the houses would be covered by a mantle of snow. Everything hibernating. And, buried beneath the snow, all the secrets people refused to bring out into the open"

Some unpleasant subjects such as peadophilia come up and it was uncomfortable reading at times. This was a slow burner. Sometimes complicated but always intriguing.
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