**Many thanks to Berkley and Nicola Solvinic for an ARC of this book provided via NetGalley! Now available as of 5.14!!**
Anna Koray has done her best to step out of the shadows...her father's shadow, that is. After Anna finds out at a young age that her father was a serial killer, Anna's mother did her best to fill the void left by his absence. Eventually, Anna ended up becoming ward of the state and moving in with another family, where she spent the rest of her preteen and teen years before blossoming into a successful adult. She has used her background as fuel, and now works as a detective hoping to stop men just like her father in their tracks. Nestled in a small rural town, far away from the terrifying events of her past, she is working to build a new life and deal with her trauma with a hypnotherapist's help.
But when she accidentally kills a perp in self defense in the line of duty, a flood of memories she has been working so hard to suppress comes back...and visions of her father with blood covered hands return...as well as memories of the forest God, Veles, that he claimed to serve. Even more terrifying, it seems that a copycat killer has emerged in town...one who seems to know ALL of the tiny details of her father's killing patterns. When Anna gets a note revealing that someone knows her secret, the new life she's been fighting for seems like it is slipping away...and she feels HERSELF slowly start to spin out of control. Could the true crime podcaster who's been skulking around have a DEADLY fascination with her father's crimes? Or did Anna inherit something she can't control...a lust for blood?
As true crime and detective stories can be a bit off-putting for me, I was nervous coming into this read that the police/detective element would take over and minimize the impact of the overall read for me...but I'm happy to say that Solvinic managed to dance back and forth across the boundaries of the mystery, true crime, paranormal, AND psychological thriller genres with fluent, effortless ease!
At the center of everything is the main character of Anna, and if she doesn't 'work' as a character? The story itself doesn't work. With Anna as our only narrator, everything about her past, the complicated history with her father, and the revelations of her suppressed memories relies on her to be a force we feel we can both trust AND question (as she is most definitely an unreliable narrator of sorts) and Solvinic did an excellent job of giving her the emotional depth, intelligence, and complexity necessary to keep the reader guessing AND flesh out what could kindly be called a complicated past. Since the suspension of disbelief required to really enjoy this one also requires buy-in with some paranormal elements, it makes it even MORE important that Anna and her internal battles feel grounded in reality...and luckily for us, Solvinic NAILS this aspect.
Speaking of the paranormal elements...if making sacrifices to the forest gods as a general concept is a turn off to you in the genre, that IS a large portion of the narrative, so you'd probably be wise to pass on this one. There are a few gruesome moments in terms of animal sacrifice etc. (although much is left to the imagination) but if you don't want to read ANYthing about them, it might be hard to find a way to 'neatly' skip these sections. Since so much is uncovered throughout Anna's sessions with her doctor, we sort of dive in and out of the past...but let's just say Veles the forest god is VERY much in Anna's present. (How? I cannot say...you'll have to read to find out! 😉) If you can't stand the (at this point, basically expected) true crime podcaster's involvement, you may also find this character a bit grating at times, but he becomes central to the plot...so again, not much room for trimming the fat here.
While the 'big twist' was a touch predictable, I can't say it spoiled the enjoyment of watching everything play out in the end. The ethical and moral questions of memory repression, the role that genetics can play in the intrinsic 'good or evil' of a person, and of course the paranormal elements...THESE are the parts of the book I found most thought provoking and fulfilling. Even if the mystery felt a bit thin, it was more about the journey with Anna than the destination, and this book gave me just a sprinkling of the unreliable narrator 'buzz' I get during an A+ psychological thriller. I have every confidence that if this is only Solvinic's debut she has a BRIGHT and sparkling future in the genre ahead!
...And let's face it, there's always at least the POSSIBILITY of the Hunter's Granddaughter...👶
😈
4 stars