The Girls Before
A Novel
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- Pedido anticipado
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- Se espera: 24 feb 2026
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- $329.00
-
- Pedido anticipado
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- $329.00
Descripción editorial
A search & rescue expert. A kidnapped woman. The lost girls who haunt them both.
“A superb mystery. . . Readers will be thinking about this long after they turn the last page.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
There is a girl in a basement.
The door has stopped opening.
The light is gone.
Stranger is trapped in the dark, with only her imagination and the scribbles on the wall left by long-dead girls to keep her company. Nearly out of food and water, she makes one last attempt to escape. But if the door opens at last, will it mean salvation, or only the beginning of her fight to survive?
Audrey is a search and rescue expert who never stopped looking for her ex-best friend, Janie, who disappeared when they were teenagers. Janie used to love the local legend of a forest witch who saves girls from bad men, but Audrey knows now that for every one saved, there’s always another one lost. When she stumbles upon evidence in the forest that a teenage runaway might have actually been kidnapped from land belonging to the town’s most prominent family, she will have to dig through decades of secrets to reveal the biggest one of all: what happened to the girls before.
Kate Alice Marshall, bestselling author of What Lies in the Woods, No One Can Know, and A Killing Cold, is back with the thrilling new novel Ashley Winstead calls, "magnetic, shocking, heartbreaking, and unputdownable."
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Marshall (A Killing Cold) delivers a superb mystery about a seemingly standard search and rescue mission in the small Pacific Northwest town of Franklin. Audrey Dixon is a talented volunteer with her local Search and Rescue department. Franklin has seen more than its share of missing persons—especially young women, including Janie Martin, Audrey's best friend who vanished years ago, and Meghan Vale, who's just disappeared. Some residents blame the urban legend of forest witch Jenny Red-Hands for the disappearances, but Audrey doesn't buy it, nor is she convinced by local police's assumption that the girls ran off on their own. Newly dedicated to finding Janie in the wake of Meghan's disappearance, Audrey notices similarities between both disappearances and uncovers evidence that they may involve the city's most powerful family. Marshall takes a familiar premise and pushes it into exciting, experimental directions, switching perspectives between Audrey and a captive victim, and teasing out the potentially supernatural urban legend at the heart of the story. Readers will be thinking about this long after they turn the last page.