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debs_shelves 's review for:
Dead Of Night
by Lisa Gray
dark
mysterious
tense
Everyone at @thrillerbookloversthepulse loves this author and is raving about this book. Thanks to @lisagraywriter and @brilliancepublishing for a #gifted ALC!
What an additive read! I love how the author weaves characters together and remind us that choices shape our lives, sometimes years down the line. The characters are dealing with guilt, regret, and the fallout of decisions they made long ago.
Author Serena hasn’t written a word since the unexpected death of her partner. She heads to a secluded clifftop house in a small California town in hopes of curing her writer’s block.
She finds out a bizarre story of a family who lived in this house years ago who vanished and her true crime loving personality just has to investigate. Someone doesn’t want this secret looked into and, the more she digs, the more that someone makes it clear she should stop.
The house is almost a character itself and the secrets it holds are plenty.
Meanwhile, Serena has a secret of her own that I didn’t see coming.
The multiple timelines slowly peel back the layers of this story.
If you’re into slowburn psychological thrillers that build tension through character and atmosphere, this one’s definitely for you. And there’s that last “wait, WHAT?!” moment right at the end.
Brenda Scott Wlazlo did an amazing job taking us along for the ride and portraying all of Serena’s emotions, as well as slowly revealing the past.
What an additive read! I love how the author weaves characters together and remind us that choices shape our lives, sometimes years down the line. The characters are dealing with guilt, regret, and the fallout of decisions they made long ago.
Author Serena hasn’t written a word since the unexpected death of her partner. She heads to a secluded clifftop house in a small California town in hopes of curing her writer’s block.
She finds out a bizarre story of a family who lived in this house years ago who vanished and her true crime loving personality just has to investigate. Someone doesn’t want this secret looked into and, the more she digs, the more that someone makes it clear she should stop.
The house is almost a character itself and the secrets it holds are plenty.
Meanwhile, Serena has a secret of her own that I didn’t see coming.
The multiple timelines slowly peel back the layers of this story.
If you’re into slowburn psychological thrillers that build tension through character and atmosphere, this one’s definitely for you. And there’s that last “wait, WHAT?!” moment right at the end.
Brenda Scott Wlazlo did an amazing job taking us along for the ride and portraying all of Serena’s emotions, as well as slowly revealing the past.