Title: The Next Woman
Author: Caroline Corcoran
Publisher: Thomas & Mercer
Pages: 322
My GoodReads Rating: ⭐⭐⭐
Lily’s best friend, Alice, disappeared
on her birthday. Living on Aurora Island, there are so many places you can
disappear to. The police are unable to find Alice. Then a woman called Becca
disappears and then Corinne. They are termed the Alphabet Women, as it
increasingly becomes obvious that someone is kidnapping the women in
alphabetical order, one women for each letter of the alphabet. An office
manager at the Aurora Island Eco Wellness Retreat, Lily lives in fear of being
taken when L comes around.
Ross, a journalist from Manchester,
comes over to the island to start a podcast that would help find the missing
women and stop the nightmare. He convinces Lily to help produce his podcast and
to offer her local knowledge. And all along, the danger is inching closer. The
police are at their wits’ end.
Then L comes around, and Lily is safe,
as another woman is taken. Has Lily escaped or are her secrets about to catch
up with her?
The story is written in the 1st
person present tense PoV of Lily first, and then, once she disappears, we get
the 1st person present tense PoV of Zadie. The chapters are named
after letters.
WHAT I LIKED:
The chapters move fast. The chapter
named M was dripping with tension. The point where Lily disappears is the
high point of the book.
WHAT I DIDN’T LIKE:
After that, it’s downhill, and we stop
caring about the missing women.
I found the resolution very
disappointing, bland and downright silly. The execution was flat. The reason
why 26 women were kidnapped was unbelievable in a very underwhelming way.
Lily’s backstory doesn’t hit us with the
force that the author intends it to. The mystery turns out to be related to her
past, but in most incidental way.
It is very annoying when a character,
supposedly key, is introduced at the 87% mark. Even Lily’s dad, Duncan, was
introduced at the close of the story, without Lily ever mentioning a word about
him.
We never get answers to how the
kidnappings actually take place, which is something we need considering the
suspense that has been built.
The last chapter, the actual tying up of
the loose ends, should have been summarised by a 3rd person
omniscient narrator. In podcast format, the information was annoying with Ross
appearing to be some kind of a know-it-all.
WHAT DIDN’T WORK FOR ME:
For the bulk of the story, we have no
idea what the police are doing.
There are some diversity token
characters put in just because. These are Radhika, Anushka and Jameela. They
have no role to play.
ALL SAID AND DONE:
A good premise, with a very tepid
mystery attached.
(I read this book on NetGalley. Thank you to the author, the publisher and NetGalley.)
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