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317 pages, Paperback
First published November 2, 2021
This is a compelling and well-crafted mystery.
Cleo is a high school student who’s about to graduate and has grand plans of going to college for forensic science. I did my undergraduate degree in forensics, and I couldn’t help but relate to her. The authenticity of her personality and her chosen career path rang true throughout the narrative, from the way that she occasionally chastised herself for not being observant enough in her personal life, to when she off-handly referenced Locard’s principle, which is the basic tenet on which all forensic science is based.
At first, Cleo is intrigued about having a scavenger hunt for her birthday, despite the creepy way that it starts. But her excitement is quickly dampened when it becomes clear that it has something to do with her abusive boyfriend’s suspicious death almost exactly a year earlier. Clearly someone wants her to pay for what happened – but who?
This novel is rocket-fast paced, and every single one of the clues is both ominous and intriguing. The chapters are short, making it easy to fall into the “just one more chapter!” trap that good thrillers lay out for unsuspecting readers like myself.
The book opens with a poem, which is included in the synopsis (scroll up!) and I bookmarked it and kept referring to it throughout the novel. It reminds me of Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None. I kept trying to figure out which of the friends was who in the poem, and who could possibly be orchestrating this elaborate blackmail scheme.
A couple of the twists were quite obvious, but the final twist was very satisfying, both in the explanation of who did it and in its execution. At one point or another, I basically suspected every single person of being the perpetrator of this malicious scavenger hunt. I was swinging back and forth with my suspicions, and I felt more paranoid than Cleo herself while trying to predict how the book would end.
All in all, this is an incredibly entertaining read.
I recommend this book for those who want to read a classic whodunnit masked as a deadly scavenger hunt with lots of tension and a few heartfelt moments.
*Thank you to Netgalley, the publisher, and the author for the ebook to review*
This review appeared first on https://powerlibrarian.wordpress.com/
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⭒❃.✮:▹ Synopsis ◃:✮.❃⭒
I know seven secrets:
One caused the fall. One did nothing. One saw it all.
One didn’t care. One used their head. One played the hero.
One was left for dead.
On her eighteenth birthday, Cleo receives a mysterious invitation to a scavenger hunt. She's sure her best friend or her brother Conner is behind it but neither of them confesses. As Hope and Cleo embark on the hunt, all the clues start to seem to relate to Cleo's dead abusive boyfriend Declan who drowned in a group rafting trip exactly a year before. A bracelet she bought him. A song he loved. A photo of the rafting group, taken just before Declan drowned.
"Declan was good with apologies. He was even better at doing things that required them.
⭒❃.✮:▹Plot◃:✮.❃⭒
The plot of this book follows Cleo and Hope running around the city and finding clues while at the same time being threatened by this mysterious stranger to reveal the things they know about Cleo.
I really enjoyed the plot of this book, it kept me on my toes at all times and I was constantly theorizing about EVERYTHING. I trusted no one and I had an idea about who actually did it the whole time. Let's just say.... I was 60% wrong
The ending didn't shock me *stares at other crazy books I've read*, I know I know very sadd but I didn't also guess who did it. I think I COULD have done it with the few clues (there aren't a lot plus I was like "there's no way the author's gonna do THAT) It's not the most unpredictable crazy mystery but still pretty fun and solid. Although I would have liked one more chapter at the end to provide a little more closure
☾☽ Cleo
"Am I still me, or am I just the sum of my worst sins?"
☾☽ Hope
Hope is the best friend we all NEED in our lives. I love Hope (I love her, not her name). She was equally intelligent, funny, and relatable. If I were in this book I can totally imagine myself being her (but less intelligent ☹️☹️) #plsdonateintelligencetome
⭒❃.✮:▹Writing◃:✮.❃⭒
The writing is the problem I have with most mysteries, it's flat. I know the writing style isn't the most important in a mystery book but I WANT IT. It's told from the first-person POV of Cleo and even though I did like her, It would have been better at a third POV (my preference) I haven't seen many mysteries and thrillers from the third POV (Truly Devious) is one.
It's not very prosy of stylish, it just describes everything in a very simple way, I wish it was more flowery but I'm still ok with what I got.
⭒❃.✮:▹Conclusion ◃:✮.❃⭒
✔️Plot - It kept me on my toes and I doubted everyone
✔️The plot twist - Not absolutely unpredictable, there were SOME clues but I still liked the reveal
🆗Characters- The characters were underdeveloped and I didn't connect to them much but in a fast-paced mystery standalone, I get why it is the way it is.
🆗Writing- It's very flat but again, I'm fine with it since this is a mystery