What We Did to Survive by Megan Lally
The title and cover art of this one grabbed me and the plot delivered everything that the exterior of the book promised. On the last day of their vacation in Mexico, best friends Hannah and Emma join Emma's new fling on a chartered sailboat with Emma's older brother along to keep an eye on them. They're looking forward to a few last hours in the sun and will be back at the resort packing their bags long beforfe the predicted storms hit the area. The first few chapters effectively set the scene and, once things start to go wrong, the plot moves quickly. One plot element jumped out to me as glaringly predictable...or maybe there was supposed to be a sense of dread knowing what was coming. I can't quite decide.
The Agony of Her by Cassandra L. Thompson
Haunted houses and folk horror are a great combination. This one has parallel plots set in 1910 and 1981. It's not the nostalgic, neon soaked 80s that so many books are exploring lately, it's the isolated from your neighbors by lack of a cell phone version. Lori Greene has inherited Haite Hill, a dilapidated gothic mansion that sits above a former mill town. Having her two stepdaughters with her while she plans the renovations is less than ideal, but her ex-husband dropped them off with no notice and she's making the best of things. In the earlier timeline, Ada Haite is banished to the house with her own stepdaughters. The book is creepy and atmospheric and held my interest as both women dealt with the same evil in different timelines.
Disclosure -- The publishers provided me with advance review copies.
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