The Last House on Needless Street
S**N
Fantastic book. Best read i have had in years.
Excellent story that will keep you totally engaged and guessing as to what is to come. One of the best books I have read in many years.
F**S
twisty
Hard to review and now spoil. It’s a triggering thriller with twists abound. Enjoy the ride is all I’ll say.
S**F
What a project! SPOILERS
I don’t know how to fairly review this book. It’s amazingly well researched and well written. The characters seem to develop themselves. The prose is beautiful and descriptive and sets an atmosphere.I note that the major plot twist has been given away in many of the reviews written thus far, with no spoiler warning. I didn’t read the reviews before I acquired the book,I just saw the one-line recommendation from Stephen King, and that was enough for me.I hate giving this only 3 stars, but anything else would be dishonest. The way the book starts out, the POV from Ted, is brilliant writing! I LOVED the cat’s POV, I still smile remembering some parts of those chapters. It was hilarious as well as creative, descriptive. And I can see how many readers would love the truth that was revealed—the bad guy is really the good guy; the heroine is really the murderer, and what is real is actually invisible. And, of course, the victim is making a heroic recovery at story’s end. <—- How’s that for spoilers??I’m not among the many readers who feel that way. I felt cheated out of a story. I’m a retired clinical social worker, and I did my share of case studying DID. A very interesting diagnosis, fascinating even. I only observed people with the diagnosis on video, never in person.I wanted to read a horror story, or a thriller. Even a whodunnit mystery. I would have settled for a supernatural tale. I should have read the spoiler reviews!I felt like the story was going along great…all set up to find out who snatched Lulu and is she still alive? The bad guy is nearly dead…then Lulu’s voice comes out of him. Like the story did an about-face, or maybe the author finally figured out what she wanted to do with the story.I usually like novels that use a little-known diagnosis in the plot. I recently read a book where the bad guy had an advanced case of Erhlos-Danlos syndrome and I loved that it was well researched and fit so well into the plot. I didn’t feel that way about this one. I felt like I read 2 different books, and the first one wasn’t finished. It seemed to me that the very talented author was working on a story…a missing girl, the cat…yada yada…and was lost as far as where to take the story. Then she heard about DID and changed gears. I read the…afterword or acknowledgements… and that is exactly what happened.I struggled to finish the book. I just wanted to know where Lulu fit in at the end. More spoiler: practically nowhere, that’s where she fit.I agree with the author, DID is a fascinating disorder. Of course it makes for a great story; the person creates their own characters and settings and proceeds to live them, be them. Like most MH disorders, it starts out as something that helps a person and eventually does anything but help. It’s just…I didn’t set out to read a case study. For me, the switch to “DID not the bad guy” was not seamless. It abruptly became a different story.I would like to read something else by this author, not just because she is a skilled and talented storyteller, but also to see if she usually has more continuity in her writing.My experience with this book was a solid 3. Yours may be much higher.
R**Y
Twists and turns
Holy crap this book was good! Truly shocked by where it started and how it ended. I honestly didn't see a lot of this coming and that was a very pleasant surprise! Olivia was my favorite character in the book. The book gets fairly dark around the 60% mark and then jumps floors it into the twisted road of the ending. I loved it!
R**N
Mental Health Issues Rather than Traditional Horror
TRGGER WARNING: Book contains graphic descriptions of violence. physical abuse, adult and child, and profound mental health issues.This book shifts POV from chapter to chapter with multiple characters presenting their perspectives on the same events. This has become a somewhat overused technique, but it actually makes semse om this particular story and the author handles it competently. The story opens with the disappearance of a little girl from a nearby lake and since one of the POVs is a young girl, the reader is led to believe that they may be one and the same. Another POV is that of the missing child’s older sister who has continued to search for her younger sibling for years. She has concluded that her sisteer is being kept captive by a young man that the police exonerated early in the investigation and rents the house next door to confirm her suspicions. The author very deliberately points the reader in the same direction.In addition to the shifting POVs of various characters, we also swap timelines; some events are occurring now, others happen during the childhood of the alledged kidnapper, Ted. It’s confusing to keep track of the chain of events. At the book’s conclusion, everything mostly adds up and makes sense, although there were a number of events that did not ultimately have any real relevance to the storyline. It’s frustrating when you are left with unanswered questions.I do not recall exactly where I read that this book was in the horror genre, but I purchased it based on that information. There are no supernatural elements whatsoever. It is more accurately in the psychological thriller category. There are some extremely horrifying elements depicted and sensitive readers could find themselves triggered by the appalling abuse described.All in all, a solid 4 star read. It was a bit confusing to bounce between POVs and timelines and I was not left with that deep sense of satisfaction that comes when at last everything comes together. I find myself still struggling with unanswered questions and dead end plot points. It was definitely not one of those books where everything wraps up neatly in the end! Overall an engaging, well written story worth reading.
G**N
Don’t rush
Read this book with care and enjoyment because the first time you read it will happen only once.Other than a sometimes sad child, this book is nothing like “If You Find Me” but if you liked that one you’ll like this. Last House is far more gothic and told in more voices than “Find Me” but it just rings the same.I really do envy you the experience of reading this for the first time.
C**A
Incredible
I’m not too fond of terror books but this one got me. I simply loved it. Incredible story with incredible plots. I just loved it!
P**N
good
A very good book by a very good author.
C**N
En vilo hasta el final
Hacía mucho tiempo que no disfrutaba tanto con la lectura de un thriller.¡Presta atención a los detalles! Vale la pena.
M**Z
You will never guess the twist and that's amazing
The author is a master in only telling you as much as you need and revealing information argonizingly slow. While still keeping your peak interest.So many times I thought I'd new I had figured out where the story was going, so many times I was left with my mouth open in disbelieve and very impressed. It's written so beautifully and emphatically while staying scary and gruesome. If you are contemplating to read this book. Just do it. You won't regret it.
A**7
Tbis one will mess with your head
My rating: 4,5 starsBoy oh boy, how do you even write a review for something like this?When I read the last page I sat in the dark for a while reflecting on what I’d just read!And thank God for the afterword that answered my first question, after putting the book down! Namely, how on earth did the author come up with such a plot!I can’t say much because you need to go in blind to enjoy it fully.But the story centres around the disappearance of a 6-year-old girl near a lake while out with her parents and older sister Dee.The police have no leads and the case goes cold. After several years, Dee gets tired of waiting for answers and decides to take the investigation into her own hands. When she discovers that a suspicious young man was seen near the lake at the time, she decides to investigate.Enter Ted, who despite of his size seems to be a little feeble-minded. Ted is a loner and he lives in the last House on Needless Street, with a little girl he calls his daughter and Olivia the cat.But trust me, nothing is what it seems!That house! I’m sure it will give me nightmares!This was such a hypnotic and atmospheric read! You want to look away but you can’t because your curiosity gets the better of you. The author twists your mind and feeds you one red herring after the other until you don’t know what’s happening. Some seriously disturbing parts had me pulling disgusted faces at my kindle, but I just couldn’t put it down! I needed to know what was going on.I found the writing to be truly compelling, with multiple POVs, each with distinctive voices.This is the perfect book for the spooky season! Don’t miss out on it!
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