Review by Kirkus Book Review
Although a surprise inheritance sounds like good luck, it turns out to be anything but in a tense, twisty thriller. New Yorkers Rosie and Chad Lowan have spent most of the first year of their marriage caring for his dying uncle Ivan. Rosie, the novel's engaging narrator, expects Ivan's long-estranged daughter, Dana, to inherit his dreamy Park Avenue apartment, so she's shocked to discover after his death that he's left it to her and Chad. It's a huge boon--Chad is an aspiring actor, and Rosie has published one bestselling true-crime book but is struggling to start a second, so money is always tight. The apartment in the elegant, century-old Windermere is not just a place to live but a multi-million-dollar asset. Dana, however, is not just surprised to be cut out of Ivan's will but furious. The couple's joy is marred not only by her rage but by odd goings-on in the building. At the behest of her editor and BFF, Max, Rosie focuses her next book on the Windermere's grisly history of residents who died in murders, suicides, and bizarre accidents. Does the building bear some sort of curse--and if so, is it all in the past? As first one person in Rosie's orbit and then another die, she becomes suspicious of people like the Windermere's longtime doorman, Abi, and the kindly old couple across the hall, Charles and Ella Aldridge, who have lived there for decades and take much interest in Rosie's efforts to get pregnant. And is Chad, a golden-haired charmer, as perfect as he seems? If all this reminds you of Rosemary's Baby, it's meant to--the book is salted with references to that classic melding of mystery and horror, and it vibrates with the same sense of escalating dread. But Unger builds her own fast-moving, creepy combination of thriller and horror in one of her best books yet. This propulsive, haunted thriller proves that competition for New York City real estate really can be deadly. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.