Review by Booklist Review
We meet Toni Murphy just as she's about to be paroled from a Canadian penitentiary. When she was 18, she and her boyfriend, Ryan, were convicted of killing Toni's younger sister. Flashbacks to the months before her sister was killed and the years she spent in prison help the reader understand the woman Toni is today and why she is torn between clearing her name and keeping her head down and avoiding a parole violation. Moving back to her hometown, Toni knows that the truth behind her sister's murder is just out of reach. She's certain, though, that it's not a coincidence that her sister died shortly after befriending Shauna, a prototypical mean girl who made a hobby out of harassing Toni all through high school. Stevens does an excellent job conveying Toni's near-constant state of unease as a victim of teenage bullying, a prison inmate protesting her innocence, a parolee who's prohibited from coming in contact with the people who could clear her name. And she supplies a corker of an ending. Fans of Alex Marwood's The Wicked Girls (2013) will enjoy this suspenseful tale.--Keefe, Karen Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
In this riveting, if overly ambitious thriller, Stevens (Always Watching) raises significant themes-bullying, troubled families, the difficulties ex-cons face-but doesn't do them all justice. In 1998, high school sweethearts Toni Murphy and Ryan Walker went to prison for killing Toni's younger sister, Nicole-a haunted girl with secrets no one guessed. The most damning-and false-testimony came from classmate Shauna McKinney and her friends, who had tormented Toni for months before the murder. Fifteen years later, Toni and Ryan return home on parole to Campbell River on Vancouver Island. Although they're legally prohibited from contact, Ryan asks Toni to help him clear their names. Meanwhile, Shauna is determined to send them back to prison. Toni finds an unlikely ally in Shauna's teenage daughter, Ashley, perhaps the only person who wholeheartedly believes Toni and Ryan are innocent. Despite some wooden secondary characters, this is an exciting page-turner with an incisive twist. Author tour. Announced first printing of 150,000. Agent: Mel Berger, William Morris Agency. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
Moving back and forth from the mid 1990s to the present, Stevens's latest thriller conveys the at times agonizing story of Toni Murphy and her boyfriend Ryan as they are wrongly convicted of her sister's brutal murder and later clandestinely try to prove their innocence when they are paroled after serving a hard 16 years in prison. At times, the story is tedious and stereotypical in the high school hazing scenes and Toni's prison experiences; Toni's mother is actually quite intolerable. However, Stevens comes through in a surprising and tension-filled finale. Excellent narration by Jorjeana Marie adds to the suspense and listeners' sympathy and hopes for Toni. VERDICT Recommended for fans of crime fiction by such authors as Gillian Flynn, Lisa Gardner, and Nicci French. ["Fans of layered mysteries will love this novel. A compelling, exceptional read," read the starred review of the St. Martin's hc, LJ 3/1/14.]-Sandra C. Clariday, Tennessee Wesleyan Coll., Athens (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Stevens (Always Watching, 2013, etc.) draws a dark crime drama from the beautiful blue-green of Canadas Vancouver Island.In the town of Campbell River, Toni has a rough home life; she can't wait for high school graduation to escape her mothers angry disapproval. Ryans home is worse, his father an alcoholic abuser. Together, however, Toni and Ryan make the broken pieces fit. In school, Toni runs afoul of mean girls Shauna, Rachel, Kim and Cathy, who harass her and spread ugly rumors. Toni has an escape planneda post-graduation apartment with Ryanbut then her younger sister, Nicole, her mothers favorite, joins Shaunas clique and starts dabbling in booze and boys and harassing Toni. It seems like kid stuff, until Nicole is bludgeoned to death. Toni and Ryan immediately become suspects; they're convicted of murder and sent to prison. Stevens' masterful plot spins into evil with "teen girls turning on each other, the viciousness and pack mentality that can arise." She writes from Tonis point of view, shifting easily between past and present while delving into family tensions before the murder, then prison life, then back to Campbell River after Tonis parole. Entirely believable, Toni evolves from a misunderstood, resentful and frightened teenager into an intelligent yet closed-off woman tempered by 15 years in prison. The writing is crisp and the dialogue realistic as Toni speculates about possible suspects and motives, knowing all the while that finding the killer may reveal one of Campbell River's ugliest secrets. Tension cranks to the breaking point when Cathy, now a drug-addled misfit, is murdered. Ryan and Toni become suspects again, but they realize its a sign that the conspiracy that jailed them has fractured. Still vulnerable yet clinging to optimism, the outcasts decide they must find Nicoles murderer. Stevens has woven a warped psychological drama, a melancholy tale that comes to an existential and yet hopeful conclusion.Think James Lee Burke and Sue Grafton: Stevens' dark psychological thriller shares their damaged people and distinctive senses of place. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.