Four Found Dead
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- ¥1,600
発行者による作品情報
A terrifying thriller from the New York Times bestselling author of Five Total Strangers and Seven Dirty Secrets!
The last show has ended, but the nightmare is just beginning.
Tonight, Riverview Theaters is closing forever, the last remaining business in a defunct shopping mall. The moviegoers have left, and Jo and her six coworkers have the final shift, a shift that quickly takes a dark turn.
First a stranger arrives with a chilling accusation. Then the power goes out and their manager disappears, along with the keys to the lobby doors and the theater safe, where the crew's phones are locked each shift. The crew's tension turns to terror when Jo discovers the dead body of one of her co-workers.
Now their only chance to escape the murderer in their midst is through the dark, shuttered mall. With its boarded-up exits and disabled fire alarms, the complex is filled with hiding places for both pursuer and pursued. In order to survive this night, Jo and her friends must trust one another, navigate the sprawling ruins of the mall, and outwit a killer before he kills them all.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this drawn-out thriller by Richards (Seven Dirty Secrets), eight teenagers fight for their lives against a murderous assailant in a desolate shopping mall. Jo and her seven coworkers are busy celebrating their bittersweet last night working at Riverview Theaters, the sole remaining open business in their soon-to-be-renovated Ohio mall. But when Jo goes to retrieve her confiscated phone from their manager, she discovers a coworker's recently murdered body. Suddenly, the lights go out and the mall's doors are sealed from the outside, and with the group's phones still locked in the theater's safe, they're forced to rely on their wits to survive until someone can call for help. Each of the teens has a secret, and as they're hunted down, their secrets' connection to the murderer's motive slowly unfurls. The immediate reveal of the killer's identity saps narrative tension, and gratuitous banter frequently stymies atmosphere. Nevertheless, Jo's urgent-feeling first-person POV, interspersed with newspaper clippings and personal email exchanges, ably guides the plot, which teems with rich character interactions and propulsive action as slasher-flick ambiance takes over the nostalgic setting. Jo reads as white, and the supporting cast is racially diverse. Ages 14–up.