EXCERPT: . . . I stripped to my bathers and waded into the foam. It was biting cold and seaweed swirled around my ankles as I tackled the slick stones. Aha. This would be why Barren Cape wasn't super popular. There were lots of beaches along this stretch of South Australia, most with gentle shores and clear blue water. Not to mention closer to the CBD. Barren Cape was an underwhelming spot in comparison. Maybe the resort developers weren't fully aware, maybe they didn't care. Any guests might have spent more time by the pool or in the cocktail bar than on the shore, and of course they would've had the immense sea views from their windows.
Once I was waist deep, I began to swim. It was glorious to have the sweat washed away. I floated, bobbing with the sea, hair fanning in the water. Couldn't help grinning. A beach all to myself.
I lifted my head and studied the resort. No sign of movement. The buildings looked back at me. Still, hollow, yet not foreboding or unsettling. In fact, I felt sorry for the place. It was neglected, unloved.
It was calling out to me.
ABOUT 'BARREN CAPE': An abandoned resort seems the perfect place to hide, but is Barren Cape a refuge or a trap?
Former housemates Mac and Erika are homeless.
Well, Erika is fine, she just has to live with her parents until she can find another rental. Mac's situation is much worse – family isn't an option and she's surfing the couches of her increasingly exasperated friends.
Driving around one lonely afternoon, Mac discovers Barren Cape. Once destined to be a luxury escape, now it's just wire fence and gray cement.
It's stark, but quiet. There's no harm in staying a little while…
MY THOUGHTS: Michele Prak has elected to build this novel around the ever-increasing problem of homelessness which affects more and more of our young (and not so young) people as rentals are converted to Air BNBs. The idea of using a partially completed and abandoned resort - to be honest, I was immediately thinking of the abandoned and derelict Sheraton Resort in Rarotonga - was nothing short of inspired. Such buildings are at once sad and chilling. Thank you, Michele Prak, I will never again be tempted to poke around in one!
While Mac is feeling much safer in her empty hotel room, which while it has a door has no handle, than when she was sleeping in her car, there are things going on in the seemingly empty resort that should have her running for her life.
We've all heard the idiom, 'No good deed goes unpunished, and in Mac's case this is very true. Her reaching out to help someone else may be her undoing. Mac should also remember that a secret is not a secret when more than one person knows.
I can't say any of the characters are particularly likeable. But that's okay, I don't have to live with them. They are all human. They are all in circumstances I would hate to endure. With this in mind, I can cut them some slack.
The story is told from multiple points of view - Mac, Erika, and Brex. Erika is Mac's ex-housemate and best friend, Brex a young teenager Mac tries to help.
This is a book best gone into knowing as little as possible. Just enjoy the simmering tension and the increasing sense of menace. I had no idea how this was going to end but while it is a little bit of a cliff-hanger, I was more than satisfied.
⭐⭐⭐⭐.5
#BarrenCape #NetGalley
MEET THE AUTHOR: She is a professional communicator with a thirty-year career in PR, social media, and politics. Her short stories have been shortlisted in several competitions, and she was runner-up in the Furphy Literary Award 2021. Michelle lives in Adelaide and teaches communication subjects at the University of South Australia.
DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Simon & Schuster Australia via NetGalley for providing an e-ARC of Barren Cape by Michelle Prak for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.