Monday, June 30, 2025

The Bachelorette Party - Camilla Sten



"On a remote, craggy island nestled off the coast of Sweden, four friends—Tilly, Anna, Linnea and Evelina—meet every year. Best friends since childhood, the idea is to drink beer, dance by the water, and shake off the weight of life's expectations. The location of the island is a secret to everyone but them. One night of reckless fun and secret-sharing, and then they return to their normal lives.
 Ten years later. Ever since she was a teenager, Tessa Nilsson has been consumed by the story of four friends who disappeared on their annual trip to a remote island together. As her true crime fervor turned into a wildly popular podcast, Tessa urgently covered Sweden’s most gruesome cases, but could never find the answers behind what happened to these women who disappeared, leaving a few maddening clues but no concrete answers. Now Tessa’s podcast has crashed and burned, any chance she had at uncovering the truth vanishing with it.
 Anneliese is Tessa’s best friend, and before she walks down the aisle, she wants to have a bachelorette party. The Baltic Vinyasa, a sleek, sophisticated yoga retreat on a small island off the coast—one with such similar characteristics to the tragedy years ago that it raises the hair on Tessa’s neck. The idea is to drink gallons of cava, do sunrise yoga, and get in their last chance to bond with the bride. Tessa will not pass this up. It’s her last chance to find out what happened to the four women, once and for all.
 And it’s someone else’s last chance to get revenge."

I'm almost always guaranteed to have a good time with an isolated, closed circle mystery.  And I did have a good time with this read.  However, I did lose some steam when the mystery solving was happening so far after the actual mystery event occurred.  We do get some flashbacks but this felt very much more of a straight up mystery rather than a mystery/thriller which is where most isolated, closed circle mysteries end up for me.  I still had a good time and I enjoyed the reveals, but overall there was less tension and it felt like the stakes were pretty low most of the time. 

The structure of the beginning did throw me off a bit.  The opening chapter introduces to the reader to the four friends who meet their demise at the end of the first chapter.  Then, we switch to follow Tessa for the rest of the book (minus the flashbacks we get).  I didn't love this as I was drawn into the initial four friends dynamic way more than Tessa and the other women attending the bachelorette weekend. That first chapter certainly got the book off to a very exciting start, but then all momentum felt like it was lost as we then had to be introduced to the new characters and have a much longer wind up to the new plot. I did like that we mostly got to see what happened to the four women on the island so we had some touch point for Tessa's investigation. 

I do think Sten does a great job with the individual interpersonal conflicts and tensions.  Each of the two groups of women have their own little rifts and issues that come into play throughout the book.  I loved the constant playing off of the issues between the characters in order to keep the peace.  There's also some wonderful passive aggressive or at the very least foot-in-mouth situations that were expertly done. I think the awkward stage of weddings where old friends and new friends are combined and aren't meshing as well as expected was really well developed.  There were more than a few awkward moments that I felt the cringe in my bones. 

I did find the mystery investigation to be lacking.  There was so much build up that Tessa is going to use this bachelorette weekend to get to the bottom of the mystery of the missing women. And while she does a lot of thinking about investigating, there just doesn't feel like there was enough time and space for her to dig around.  We get maybe 3 instances of her doing some light looking-around before the finale of the book.  And it does feel like the events of the finale (which would have happened without her investigation so it ended up feeling even more pointless.  

Overall, this was a pretty entertaining read.  It wasn't my perfect isolated, closed circle mystery but I enjoyed a lot of the character elements and I had a great time once the pacing picked up in the last 25%.

Thanks to NetGalley and St. Martin's Press for the ARC.  Publication date was June 10, 2025.


Monday, June 9, 2025

Fifty Fifty - Steve Cavanagh

 


"“911 what’s your emergency?”

“My dad’s dead. My sister Sofia killed him. She’s still in the house. Please send help.”

“My dad’s dead. My sister Alexandra killed him. She’s still in the house. Please send help.”

One of them is a liar and a killer.

But which one?"

This is one of those books where the concept is really straightforward - two sisters accuse each other of the murder of their father - and it is expertly executed. I'd say if you are at all intrigued by that set-up, then you should pick up this book.  Full stop.  No notes. 

When I saw this on NetGalley, I had never heard of Steve Cavanagh nor the Eddie Flynn series.  I didn't do any research prior and only found out this is book #5 in the Eddie Flynn series when I went to get the cover art from Goodreads. There were a few spots where Eddie was mentioning his past that I wondered, briefly, if there were previous books but those wonders were quickly dismissed as the book addressed those points in such a way that felt more like book 1 in a series instead of book 5.  I didn't feel like I was out of the loop on anything and would still recommend this read if you've never read any other Eddie Flynn books.  I do plan on going back and reading the earlier books in the series.

The characters in this were great - we get 5 different POVs - and each of them felt very well developed and distinct.  Our POVs are both sisters, Eddie, another lawyer Kate, and then the POV of the killer who we know per the premise is one of the sisters but the specific sister is never named in these killer POV chapters.  I loved that these different characters also all interacted with each other throughout the read so we not only get Eddie's view of Kate but also Kate's view of Eddie.  I think this was a great way to get character development into the story while keeping the main plot moving ahead quite quickly. 

The mechanic of the killer POV was fantastic.  The first time it showed up, I thought it was obviously referring to one specific sister and maybe this read was going to turn into the type where the reader knows more than the characters.  But then the next time we got the killer's POV, it seemed to point to the other sister. It continued like this, flip flopping back and forth between the two sisters, for the rest of the book.  We got so much information, but it was still muddied all the way until the end for me.  

I haven't read a lot of legal thrillers, so I don't have a lot to compare this one to.  I did like that it wasn't too focused on the actual court proceedings and instead felt more like a PI investigation/detective fiction.  The legal stuff we do get on page is very well explained that I think even someone not versed in this genre could follow just fine.

Overall, this was a great legal thriller and I very much enjoyed the characters and POV mechanics.  I will 100% be reading the back books in this series and look forward to reading on in the series as well.

Thanks to NetGalley and Atria Books for the ARC.  Publication date was June 3, 2025.