Michael Aronovitz's 'The Winslow Sisters,' is the direct sequel to his previous book, 'The Sculptor,' a terrific serial killer novel written with intelligence and wit. In 'The Winslow Sisters,' Aronovitz seems prepared to finish the story with a huge bang, taking the Sculptor's tale into a very different direction. Although the intricate game of cat-and-mouse that made such a deep impression in the previous novel crops up here too, the focus of the novel is not so much the Sculptor himself and his insane shenanigans, as the three girls who end up having to face him head on. Aronovitz has taken great care to make sure that the novel can be read as a standalone, to the point that even though old characters do make an appearance, it's only the new ones that get the spotlight.
I have to confess that it didn't always feel as a sequel to me, since the kind of twists and the sort of demands which the Sculptor forces on the girls are far more extreme and gorier than anything that's transpired before; plus their father is the one who's first involved, and the turn to the daughters came as a surprise (it comes very early in the novel, so no spoiler there!). Information comes in very small doses, yet the book is not a slow-burn. The developments are very well thought through, often surprising and much often even downright bizarre; still, we learn of the sisters on the fly, their whole mental and psychological make up unfolds page by page as we read, the only givens the Sculptor's voice and his menacing presence.
On the surface, this is a slasher story, with lots of horror movie references, and the Winslow Sisters are supposed to be "final girls." I don't think this entirely works, however: there's too much unpredictability, too much weirdness, for this to be a typical slasher tale. It's wordy, and detailed, and full of jaw-dropping moments, the latter not because of the gore or the killings, but because the central characters' decisions and ways of thinking are very hard to fully understand. That said, the book does provide closure to one of the best and smartest serial killer tales around! Highly recommended!