Are people "born bad" or do they have a choice in the matter - that is the overwhelming theme of this book - and it is chilling. The last third blew my mind and made up for several small annoyances throughout the book. It is definitely not for the faint of heart in regard to darkness - it is a very heavy, dark, Southern gothic thriller - and my inky, black soul ate it up!
You know from the start that twenty-four years earlier, two sixth-grade girls disappeared in the small town of Repentance, Arkansas. Mary Grace Dobbs remembers it all very well, as one of the missing girls was her best friend, and the other was her nemesis. Even then, Repentance was a small town that lived and breathed its name - an outwardly religious, devout community; but the truth was there were a myriad of issues brewing beneath the surface. The main suspect in the girls' disappearance was a drifter mechanic, Darryl Stokes, who just so happened to be the only black man in town. Even after someone else was arrested, the cloud of suspicion never left Stokes. He eventually left town, but after more than two decades, he returns and within weeks, another sixth-grade girl goes missing. Mary Grace is now the town's sheriff and still struggling with guilt over the fact that she was the one to initially point a finger at Stokes. Proving what really happened two decades before and what is currently taking place, will forever change the town and Mary Grace as well.
The story unfolds via a dual timeline . One follows Mary Grace in 1995, taking the reader back to her childhood, fraught with loneliness and despair. The second focuses on Sheriff Mary Grace's investigation into more disappearances, which uncovers shocking skeletons in more than one closet. The story held my attention from the beginning, but I did find some of the initial chapters to be somewhat choppy and disjointed (with a lot of characters), and I was confused several times as to which timeline I was in. Still though, there was just enough foreshadowing in both timelines that I knew something big was coming, and it kept me going even through a few of the slower, uneven parts. Patience is the key with this one - and trust me - it's worth it!
There was more than a fair share of stereotyping, which is a pet peeve of mine, although in this one, it ended up working well with the theme, so I didn't take much issue with it overall. The blurb also made me leery initially because it talks about one of the characters killing animals, but it was a minor part of the book, and it wasn't family pets or anything of that nature, so it was not overly disturbing. Can we just talk about that ending though?! Whoa. The twists at the end were so unexpected that a day and a half later, my brain is still trying to process it all.
I have wavered back and forth between 4 and 5 stars - even as I'm writing this. The last part of the book makes it one of my favorite "shock" reads in 2021 so far, but I can't discount the slow, uneven beginning (honestly, if I hadn't read several reviews saying to stick with it, I may have put it aside for the time being). Overall, though, this is a gripping debut with a shocking ending! 4 read-this-one-for-yourself stars.