I want to comment that I dislike animal cruelty/abuse. In the books, I read. I'd also like to mention that Liaka is fine. In the brief scene with Liaka, Adam Taylor isn't gratuitous; in his writing. Nonetheless, it was uncomfortable reading it.
The Last Word is a cleverly written, creepy, dark and twisted psychological cat-and-mouse thriller with more plot twists than a switchback road. Add in some manipulation for a fast-paced page-turner that I couldn't put down. It's a book within a book told by unreliable narrators. Make sure your schedule is wide open before reading.
The setting is an isolated beach house on Strand Beach on rainy Washington Coast where all the homes and the summer rental cabins are closed during the winter except for the one Emma Carpenter is house-sitting with her faithful companion Laika by her side. And her older eccentric neighbour Deek. To pass the time, Emma reads copious amounts of discounted e-books while drinking her favourite ginger tea to escape a personal trauma she has suffered. That made her run away from her life back home. She picked that remote beach house for a reason— She communicates with her neighbour via a whiteboard facing each other's windows through telescopes. She also plays hangman with Deek, a master at the old-fashioned game, which makes Emma curious. She tries to guess what her retired neighbour did in the past and his identity.
After Emma reads a book titled Murder Mountain, which turns out to be the worst book she has ever, quite possibly, read and consequently, she uploads a scathing one-star review. As a result, she soon gets into an online argument with the book's author. He asks, then demands that she take the feedback down, but she refuses. Emma then starts hearing intruders suspecting that her mind may be playing tricks on her. Or has the author H.G. Kane made good his threats? The author becomes more sinister each time she refuses him. She doesn't take his threats seriously and goes about her day and soon realizes that was a bad idea-
After Emma has gone to bed, she sees a shadowy figure standing in her room when she's awoken from a nightmare. Not sure what to make of it; is it an apparition, or is there a person in her bedroom? Is her mind playing tricks with her? She thinks she's just seeing things. After all, she hasn't been sleeping or eating. The toilet starts flushing on its own and hears odd sounds. Emma thinks it's an old house with its quirks. The M/C Emma Carpenter grew on me throughout the book. The contrast between the antagonist, with his paranoid delusions and an incel mindset, and Emma, portrayed with depth, flawed, flailing through life, feels like a ghost of her former self from the traumatic event that has gutted her. She finds her inner courage and the inner strength within herself she didn't think she had, which makes for a fascinating showdown that kept me glued to the pages and furiously turning the pages late into the night.
I could',t help rooting for her to fight, persevere and take her life back.
Soon after, the tension builds, and it becomes palpable at times. The suspense ramps up and doesn't let up. The final shocking twist blew my mind. When you think you figured it out, Adams puts in another twist that had me on the edge of my seat.
w0w! Adams exceeded my expectations and gave me an ending that almost gave me whiplash. It was my first time reading a Taylor Adams novel, and it won't be my last. I can't wait for his next thriller and finally reading No Exit. It has been unread on my bookshelf for too long. It is a must-read for thriller lovers, and I think horror fans would also enjoy it. The Last Word is a page-turning psychological thriller and a story about family trauma, learning to forgive yourself, and letting go of the guilt you have been carrying around.
⚠️TW dog poisoning, violence, mental illness