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Alison Gaylin

Book - 2025

"A single mother is desperate to protect her family as they are targeted by a group of violent conspiracy theorists in this riveting and all too plausible thriller from USA Today bestselling author Alison Gaylin. Meg Russo was behind the wheel when it happened. She and her husband Justin were driving their daughter Lily to college, the family celebrating the eighteen-year-old's future. Then a car sidled up beside them, the young men inside it behaving erratically. The Russos' car went off the road, and Justin didn't survive the accident. Four months later, Meg works to distract herself from her grief, reopening her small local bookstore. But soon after returning to work, bizarre messages and visitors begin to arrive, wit...h strangers threatening Meg and vandalizing the store. They are obsessed with a young adult novel tiled The Prophesy, which was published 20 years earlier. An online group of believers are convinced the book predicted a plague, and social media posts link it to Satanism. People are sure it heralds the apocalypse. These conspiracy theorists vow to seek revenge on its author...Meg. As the threats turn more violent, Meg begins to suspect that Justin's death may not have been an accident. To find answers and save herself and Lily, she must get to the root of the lies fueling these people to come after them-and find a way to face them head on"--

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
Thrillers (Fiction)
Novels
Romans
Published
New York, NY : William Morrow 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Alison Gaylin (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9780063275188
9780063000964
9780063297807
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Edgar winner Gaylin (The Collective) delivers a timely thriller about the nefarious workings of cults and conspiracy theorists. Meg Russo and her husband, Justin, own a bookstore in the small town of Elizabethville, N.Y. The couple lives a quiet life with their 18-year-old daughter, Lily, a musician intent on following in the footsteps of her off-the-grid grandfather, who achieved minor rock stardom years earlier. While driving to Ithaca, N.Y., to move Lily into college, the family gets in a nasty car crash; Justin dies, and Meg, who was behind the wheel, blames herself. Back in Elizabethville, she finds the bookshop vandalized and videos across the internet accusing her and her family of practicing satanism. Quickly realizing that she, Justin, and Lily have become the targets of a doomsday cult, Meg wrestles with revealing secrets she's been hiding from her daughter for decades, including the story behind a book Meg published when she was a teenager, and details about Lily's grandfather. Gaylin matches her lucid, propulsive prose with crackerjack plotting. This will grip readers from start to finish. Agent: Deborah Schneider, Gelfman Schneider Literary. (Jan.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A QAnon-like conspiracy cult targets an unwitting family. Hudson Valley booksellers Meg and Justin Russo are driving their 18-year-old daughter, Lily, to Ithaca College for freshman orientation when a carload of skinheads pulls up alongside them and starts taking pictures. The Russos try to change lanes, but their vehicle skids, spins, and rolls, killing Justin. When Meg returns to work, somebody posts a three-month-old video on the store's Facebook page in which Justin glares from behind the cash register as the female videographer sings, "We are waaaatching. We are armed. We will triiiiumph. You'll pay for her sins." Meg then discovers the same woman is currently in the store's kids' section, unshelving books and pounding on walls to locate a "secret chamber." As Meg evicts her, the woman yells, "One down, three to go." Meg's reclusive father, retired semi-famous musician Nathan Lerner, insists the Russos' accident was sabotage--a claim Meg writes off to drugs and dementia. Then Lily hears a rumor that sends her down a disturbing internet rabbit hole. Posters on an anonymous 4chan-esque website maintain Nathan is a Satanist who sold his and his family's souls for a hit single. Further, they assert that a small-press fantasy novel Meg wrote as a teen "both predicted and caused the end of the world." To stop the rapidly approaching apocalypse, Nathan, Meg, and Lily "must either repent--or die violently on film at the hands of the true believers." This tense, horror-tinged domestic thriller unfolds via a swiftly cycling third-person-present narrative, the protagonists' mounting fear and paranoia so palpable as to be contagious. Gaylin writes perceptively about grief, guilt, and the complexities of parent-child relationships, while also spotlighting the dangers of misinformation and the allure of conspiracy theories in times of chaos. Timely, terrifying, and all too plausible. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.