Pray for the Girl
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- €8.49
Publisher Description
Joseph Souza, acclaimed author of The Neighbor, brings readers into the dark heart of a small town in this riveting, relentlessly twisting new novel . . .
Lucy Abbott never pictured herself coming back to Fawn Grove, Maine. Yet after serving time in Afghanistan, then years spent as a sous chef in New York, she’s realized her only hope of moving on from the past involves facing it again. But Fawn Grove, like Lucy herself, has changed.
Lucy’s sister, Wendy, is eager to help her adapt, almost stifling her with concern. At the local diner, Lucy is an exotic curiosity—much like the refugees who’ve arrived in recent years. When a fifteen-year-old Muslim girl is found murdered along the banks of the river, difficult memories of Lucy’s time overseas come flooding back and she feels an automatic connection. At first glance, the tragedy looks like an honor killing. But the more Lucy learns about her old hometown, the less certain that seems.
There is menace and hostility here, clothed in neighborly smiles and a veneer of comfort. And when another teen is found dead in a cornfield, his throat slit, Lucy—who knows something about hiding secrets—must confront a truth more brutal than she could have imagined, in the last place she expected it . . .
“Delivers one devilish twist after another, pulling you into the story and never letting go. A tightly paced suspense drawn with compellingly real characters, Souza’s newest domestic thriller is a genre-defining tour-de-force.”
—Steve Konkoly
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Souza (The Neighbor) offers a well-intentioned but relentlessly tone-deaf exploration of bigotry and xenophobia in rural America. At the start of the convoluted small-town whodunit, Lucy Abbott a 33-year-old double-amputee sous chef and former army medic flees New York City and returns home to Fawn Grove, Maine, after suffering a mental breakdown. She initially won't leave her sister's guest room, but then someone stones to death a 15-year-old Afghani refugee outside Fawn Grove. Lucy still has flashbacks of an "honor killing" that she failed to prevent while in Afghanistan, and since the detective on the case her childhood bully is virulently anti-immigrant, she decides to solve the murder herself. When the son of a racist white minister turns up dead in a cornfield near a pro-Islamic crop circle, Lucy questions whether somebody from the local immigrant community is responsible. But the more she digs, the less likely that seems and the more anonymous threats she receives. Unfortunately, manufactured conflict and clunky expository dialogue sap tension, while a series of increasingly preposterous plot twists rob the central mystery of heft and verisimilitude. Hopefully, Souza will do better next time.