Here is an abduction story with some classic elements, and some unexpected bits. It was familiar enough to easily follow along, and surprising enough to keep me turning the page.
I found the writing style interesting, and worth thinking about. It is omniscient third person, but the camera lens shifts so suddenly, and you find yourself in someone else's head for that portion of the story. And just when you think you're getting to know this particular character, switch! You're in someone else's head. There were a few sections I had to go back to reread, and rethink a couple of times, just to make sure I was following the crumb trail correctly.
Elizabeth, the protagonist, is an unexpected character. In many ways she is a classic 'spoiled rich girl', and in other ways she is the quintessential nurturer, and then at times she is intelligent and strategic and determined. There are multiple antagonists and I wasn't sure who the baddest guys were, and who was more loathesome.
Mitchell is featuring people groups who are often overlooked as story characters: people living with various physical, cognitive, and mental health challenges. Between some characters there are sharp moral divides, where this person's behaviour is governed by selfishness or lack of moral judgment, and another character's behaviour is governed by trauma and a twisted view of reality, while the behaviour of at least two others is linked to how they were raised. And the behaviours of one, at least, is well out of anyone's control. Practically.
Interesting! And thought provoking. It would make a good conversation over coffee.