OUR WICKED HISTORIES, is the second novel I have read by Amy Goldsmith. This is one that grabs you from the start, and makes you question all of your theories as the novel progresses.
Meg, a less-than-wealthy aspiring artist, wins a scholarship for a prestigious school that her mother is the head custodian for. Surrounded by entitled teenagers used to the rank and privilege that money provides, Meg feels like a "pretender", an outsider who clearly doesn't belong with these people. Much to her surprise, one of the popular Wren twins, Lottie, takes her under her wing immediately. With Lottie, Meg is moved into her "center circle", made to feel almost a part of the group. Of course, others resent this, and don't miss a chance to put her down as a "pity case". Lottie's brother, Seb, being the perfect persona of a handsome rich boy who gets what he wants, complicates matters in his own way . . .
I felt that we got great characterization for the main characters, and just enough of the side characters to make it feel fleshed out. Going by the age of the characters, their motivations and actions seemed realistic. The story flowed so well that I really thought about it, even when I WASN'T actively reading it! The one issue that I had was how impatient I was to find out WHAT exactly happened at a summer ball, that leads to the story we are told. A huge falling out between Meg and another of Lottie's group leads to Meg being possibly suspended from the school. This incident is referred to often, but not fully understood until the end. After a tumultuous summer of "social exile", Meg receives an invitation to Lottie and Seb's ancestral home--a decrepit "mansion" surrounded by a weedy bog, with an unsavory reputation. Also invited, were the rest of Lottie's "inner circle", and Seb.
The entire Wren family, who had no care for their workers in the past, have never been forgiven for the deaths and heartache they caused through their use and disposal of local workers who originally built this old home. The place is ominous from the beginning, with tales of a vengeful Banshee, and several deaths by drowning in the weed infested bog.
"What would be found if they drained it? What had made it what it was? Not just a body of water but something terrible.....Something that soaked into the mind like an ugly stain."
Overall, the atmosphere of this novel was top tier. I actually cared about what was happening to the characters, and couldn't wait to find out what was happening out there in the isolated land. The issue that bothered me was how suddenly things were remembered at the end of the story, in order to wrap things up. Personally, I feel the story would have been just as tense and gripping if we had known most of that incident from the beginning. A very solid novel that I honestly enjoyed!
Recommended.
*I received an arc of this novel through NetGalley and the publisher. All opinions expressed in this review are uniquely my own.*