Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Ali McGovern, the mentally unstable narrator of this unsettling thriller set in Scotland from Edgar-finalist McPherson (Quiet Neighbors), manages to land a well-paying job at Howell Hall, a psychiatric hospital in the Galloway countryside, despite her lack of experience with special-needs clients. On the home front, her husband has run his business into the ground, and her beloved 15-year-old son is sullen and uncommunicative. At Howell Hall, Ali develops a fondness for Sylvie and Julia, two young patients, but can't figure out why they've been confined there. Nor does the director provide satisfactory answers to Ali's questions. The discovery of a body on the hospital grounds increases her anxiety. In this universe, no one is to be trusted, and Ali is forced to rely on herself-despite all the questions about her own tenuous grip on sanity. McPherson keeps the suspense level high; her heroine comes across as clinically interesting but not particularly sympathetic. Agent: Lisa Moylett, Coombs Moylett Literary Agency. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
A year ago, Ali McGovern began putting her troubled past behind her, enjoying family life in her dream house and running her own beauty salon. But all that has slipped away, owing to husband Marco's feckless business decisions. Ali doctors her résumé and applies for a job at Howell Hail, a nearby private psychiatric hospital. Despite her lack of experience, she is hired with a salary that seems too good to be true. Soon Ali begins to fear she is on the verge of another breakdown as she becomes unnerved by the discovery of a body and drawn to several patients at the clinic. At home, she is concerned abour her secretive son Angelo and her tense relationship with Marco. Is Ali being gaslighted? VERDICT McPherson, author of the engaging "Dandy Gilver" series, is also known for her intricately plotted, suspenseful, and unnerving standalones (Quiet Neighbors). Her latest delivers taut psychological thrills and a traditional mystery with an overlay of creepiness.-ACT © Copyright 2017. 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
A Scottish woman's psychological history causes her to question her sanity.Ali and Marco McGovern are refugees from success. Both had flourishing businesses, but Marco's highflying ambitions crashed, forcing them to sell everything and move with their 15-year-old son, Angelo, to a grungy cottage in Galloway, where Marco announces he's found a possible job for Ali at Howell Hall, a mental institution looking for a beautician and art therapist. Despite having owned a beauty salon, Ali knows she doesn't have the credentials, but she lets Marco pad her resume and is hired by Dr. Ferris for a salary large enough to make her suspicious. Marco too finds a job, but their celebrations end when a long-dead body is found at the nearby abbey. The police question Angelo, who often hangs out on the grounds, but can't charge him because he was only 3 when the unidentified man was murdered. Now the boy's typical teen problems are compounded by a cruel joke played by a girl he fancies. Ali quickly makes friends with most of the Howell Hall staff but not the coldly efficient Dr. Ferris, who leaves the treatment of patients almost entirely to her husband. Ali's drawn to Sylvie, a young woman who's been almost catatonic for 15 years but seems taken with her. Another patient with a compelling story is Julia, who claims to have killed her father but seems at times almost too rational. Upset over Angelo's problems with the police, Ali is aggravated by her husband's and son's insistence that she keep calm and starts to have doubts about Marco's reasons for getting her a job she is not equipped to do. She does not understand and is deeply hurt by an estrangement from her parents, which adds another layer to the mystery, and her stressful work makes her worry about her own mental problems, stemming from a breakdown 10 years ago. McPherson is a master at creating psychological tension and doubt about the motives of her characters, so it is no surprise that Ali thinks she hears sounds in her head and is constantly trying to overcome the sense that maybe she is actually going mad. The more details of her earlier breakdown become clear, the harder McPherson makes it to decide whether she's mentally ill or being cruelly manipulated by unknown people for obscure reasons that will be uncovered in the denouement. Although the idea isn't original, the clever way McPherson (Quiet Neighbors, 2016, etc.) reveals each hint of the truth makes this a one-sitting read. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.