““No,” I cried, pressing my hand over my mouth as bile rose in my throat. Courtney and Josh lay on the floor in a pool of crimson blood” (Page 38).
The Cabin, by Natasha Preston, is a thrilling murder mystery with many twists and turns, secrets, love, and loyalty. This fiction book was so amazing I finished it in two days. I couldn’t put it down because I was dying to know (no pun intended) who the murderer was!
In this fast-paced novel, seven teenagers go to a cabin on a weekend getaway before they go off to university. One morning, when Mackenzie goes to get her friends some tea, she finds Courtney and Courtney’s boyfriend Josh stabbed to death. When the police investigate, there was no forced entry to the cabin, therefore pinning the murder on Mackenzie or one of her friends. As the book goes on we learn many dark events that happened in the past and that there is more to the murder than meets the eye. For example, the tragedy eight months before that left two more of her friends dead. This is a key part of solving the present murder.
Mackenzie keeps denying that the murderer was one of her friends because they had all been friends since middle school and she can’t bare the thought of one of them being a killer. Eventually, though, she is forced to face the facts. Is the murderer Kyle, Aaron, Megan, or MacKenzie’s love - Blake?
MacKenzie feels it is her duty to prove her and her friends innocent, so she sets out on her own investigation to catch the killer.
My favorite parts are the intrigue and the big reveals; you have no idea who the murderer is because not many clues are given at the start. You also don’t know that much about the characters, but as the book goes on, you learn each character has a dark secret that could serve as a motive. I loved how much was revealed as the book progressed. This book is so mysterious you keep turning the pages.
Another thing I loved was the ending. It was action-packed, revealed the murderer in an unsettling way, and left you with a myriad of questions. It totally left me in shock. I love how it ends on a cliff-hanger and how not everything is solved.
I thought it was interesting how the author incorporated a love story into a murder mystery. The murder brought MacKenzie and Blake together because they always had to be there for each other; it was nice to know something good came out of all the deaths that happened.
The theme I found most prominent was loyalty. MacKenzie was so loyal to her friends that she started her own investigation to prove it was someone else who was the killer.
I also found that trust was an important theme because throughout the book; MacKenzie formed a relationship with Josh’s brother Blake, and she trusted him almost the day she met him.
This is one of the best books I have ever read and I would definitely recommend it to anyone who likes a good mystery. If I were to rate it out of ten I would give it a nine, because there were some cheesy parts of the writing but it was overall a good story. There are some parts that are a bit adult, so the recommended age was 14+ and I agree with that.
“Someone isn’t telling the truth. And MacKenzie’s first mistake? Assuming the killing is over…”
317 pages, Sourcebooks Fire.
Merged review:
““No,” I cried, pressing my hand over my mouth as bile rose in my throat. Courtney and Josh lay on the floor in a pool of crimson blood” (Preston 38).
The Cabin, by Natasha Preston, is a thrilling murder mystery with many twists and turns, secrets, love, and loyalty. This fiction book was so amazing I finished it in two days. I couldn’t put it down because I was dying to know (no pun intended) who the murderer was!
In this fast-paced novel, seven teenagers go to a cabin on a weekend getaway before they go off to university. One morning, when Mackenzie goes to get her friends some tea, she finds Courtney and Courtney’s boyfriend Josh stabbed to death. When the police investigate, there was no forced entry to the cabin, therefore pinning the murder on Mackenzie or one of her friends. As the book goes on we learn many dark events that happened in the past and that there is more to the murder than meets the eye. For example, the tragedy eight months before that left two more of her friends dead. This is a key part of solving the present murder.
Mackenzie keeps denying that the murderer was one of her friends because they had all been friends since middle school and she can’t bare the thought of one of them being a killer. Eventually, though, she is forced to face the facts. Is the murderer Kyle, Aaron, Megan, or MacKenzie’s love - Blake?
MacKenzie feels it is her duty to prove her and her friends innocent, so she sets out on her own investigation to catch the killer.
My favorite parts are the intrigue and the big reveals; you have no idea who the murderer is because not many clues are given at the start. You also don’t know that much about the characters, but as the book goes on, you learn each character has a dark secret that could serve as a motive. I loved how much was revealed as the book progressed. This book is so mysterious you keep turning the pages.
Another thing I loved was the ending. It was action-packed, revealed the murderer in an unsettling way, and left you with a myriad of questions. It totally left me in shock. I love how it ends on a cliff-hanger and how not everything is solved.
I thought it was interesting how the author incorporated a love story into a murder mystery. The murder brought MacKenzie and Blake together because they always had to be there for each other; it was nice to know something good came out of all the deaths that happened.
The theme I found most prominent was loyalty. MacKenzie was so loyal to her friends that she started her own investigation to prove it was someone else who was the killer.
I also found that trust was an important theme because throughout the book; MacKenzie formed a relationship with Josh’s brother Blake, and she trusted him almost the day she met him.
This is one of the best books I have ever read and I would definitely recommend it to anyone who likes a good mystery. If I were to rate it out of ten I would give it a nine, because there were some cheesy parts of the writing but it was overall a good story. There are some parts that are a bit adult, so the recommended age was 14+ and I agree with that.
“Someone isn’t telling the truth. And MacKenzie’s first mistake? Assuming the killing is over…”
317 pages, Sourcebooks Fire