The Open House by Sam Carrington
Publication
Date: 10th Dec 2020
Genre:
Mystery, Thriller
3.5 stars
The blurb
talks about the open house event (an attempt by the heroine, Amber) to sell the
house our heroine, Amber, and her two kids live in. She is separating from
Nick, her husband, and plans to relocate to another city to live with her
boyfriend, Richard.
So
thirteen people enter the house during the event, and only 12 go out. What
happens to the 13th person? Are they responsible for the strange occurrences in
the house? Are they the same person who will do anything to make sure that the
house doesn’t get sold?
Isn’t that
an interesting premise? Coupled with the cover picture, I requested the ARC of
the book immediately.
Three
people narrate the story, with Amber having the maximum share. The other is
Barb, her MIL, and the third person is a stranger/ killer(?).
What I Like:
The
character development is good. Even if I don’t relate to any of them, I can
visualize the characters enact their roles. The author sets up layer after
layer of suspense, building it high and high. The narration is steady (even if
not seems to be happening at times). There are too many characters. But
somehow, all of them contribute in one way or another. I could deduce some and
was surprised by others, so that’s balanced.
The
chapters are short, which made it a relatively easy read. It’s 384 pages, after
all (and no, I wasn’t aware of the page count until later). For me, to touch
100 pages in 70-80 minutes means that the book is a fast-read.
What I
Felt Lacking:
The climax
wasn’t as impactful as it should be. It ended up more as an info-dump about the
past rather than create any lasting effect on the reader. Too much was withheld
until the last 20%, where it was unleashed on the reader in rapid succession.
Amber
blabbers quite a lot. Yes, she is stressed and under a lot of pressure, but we
could do with a little less rambling.
There are
a lot of subplots. They are solved and interlinked, but not in a satisfactory
manner. The biggest issue is, of course, the ending. It fell flat after all the
high hopes. Talking more about it would reveal the story, so no more.
Overall,
this is a decent thriller that could have been paced better (in terms of
sharing information with the readers). A must-read? Nope.
I got an ARC from NetGalley and Avon Books UK.
#NetGalley
#TheOpenHouse
No comments:
Post a Comment