Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Where They Found Her by Kimberly McCreight

When the body of an unidentified infant is found near a riverbed in a small college town, new to the area (and new to reporting) Molly is asked to cover the story.  Molly's sudden career change came about after a tragedy where she lost her own child, so this isn't going to be easy on her or her supportive husband.  As Molly digs in deeper to the story and the town, she soon finds that everyone seems to be connected here in some way, and that there are deep secrets that go back decades.


















I don't read a ton of adult books, but when I find an author that I'm really feeling, I try to keep an eye out for their books.  I read Reconstructing Amelia last year and REALLY liked it.  It was addicting.  So I was very excited to see what else this author would come up with, and I was happy with it.  This book is totally different than Amelia, but very similar all at the same time.  The mystery and setting and multiple layers to the story sets it apart, but it kept the teen element and also the use of articles and journal entries to supplement the story.

This story is basically an entire town full of stories that are woven together.  You have the main girl Molly, who went through a rough patch of depression after a baby she was carrying died in the womb.  Her family just made the move from NYC to this small college town so that Justin (her husband) could take a job as a professor and so they could have a fresh start.  Her daughter, Ella, is in school, and Molly has switched from being a lawyer to a reporter for the Ridgedale Reader.  The second story-line is with Sandy.  She's a 16 year-old high school drop-out living with her unpredictable mother Jenna.  Jenna grew up in this town and recently brought them back here for reasons she hasn't figured out.  Then Jenna goes missing, and Sandy is facing eviction.  With no way to contact her mom, and no way she would contact the police, she starts searching on her own.  The other narrator is Barbara.  She has a kid in preschool with Molly's daughter and is married to the chief of police.  She's extremely out of touch with reality and really fun (and frustrating) to read.

The way the side characters all interconnected was really interesting, and made the book that much better.  Stella (a friend to Molly & Sandy's boyfriend's mother) was my favorite because she didn't hold back or care much what people in the town thought.

Although I truly liked the mystery and the way she mixed in the newspaper articles, etc., there were things about Molly that bugged me.  She was too much in her head, over-analyzing every word she said.  She also was a bit of a dweller, woe is me- type.

Quote I Liked: "Happy was my adopted country, not my native land"

OVERALL: A book with an interesting mystery, setting, and interconnected stories that I would totally recommend.  Even to my YA peeps.  This book and Reconstructing Amelia are definitely YA friendly as they are partially narrated by teenage characters.  I think it was a solid sophomore effort for Kimberly McCreight.


This Book Contains:
  • 3 narrators
  • Sections of newspaper articles, journal entries, therapy transcripts
  • College town
  • High school parties
  • Depression
  • Sexual assault
  • Death
  • Low, Middle, and Upper Class
  • Divorce

Add it to your To-Read List!!

My Rating: 3.5/4











How I got this book: Bought it
Date Published: 4/14/2015



 photo signature_zpsbfa41d62.png

5 comments:

  1. I really liked Reconstructing Amelia and am really looking forward to reading this one. Great review!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yay for Reconstructing Amelia!! It had me hooked!

      Delete
  2. This one is new to me but I love the sound of it! I am always for a good mystery!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It is a good mystery, not perfect, but definitely interesting and page-turning

      Delete
  3. I am starting to really love books that uses other media insets to tell the story, such as web page articles, newspapers and journals. I think it comes from my obsession with Babysitters Club when I was in elementary. Awesome review, and this book sounds very appealing!

    ReplyDelete