For well over a hundred years the empty dilapidated Victorian mansion has sat atop the cliff, towering over the small Texas town of Bulverde. Rumoured to be haunted the locals know to avoid it.
Until 2010 when Ethan Matthews, his wife Kim, and their three-year-old daughter, Sophie move in, intent on renovating and fully modernising the property. Fast forward thirteen years later to the night of a lavish, no expense spared, sweet sixteen birthday party, a night when someone will tumble to their death from the glass walled balcony to the bluestone patio far below.
Note: Apologies for any incorrect spelling like characters names etc, as I only had early access to the audiobook.
The Players:
Dani – Ethan’s 27-year-old second wife. The party hostess. She has a new baby with Ethan – Charlotte. The three of them live in the house.
Kim – Ethan’s first wife. Sophie’s mother. Early forties. She put her heart and soul into the renovations but it’s Ethan’s young wife that has reaped the benefits.
Ethan – Dani’s husband and Kim’s ex-husband. Sophie’s father. Early forties. The party host.
Orlaith – Baby Charlotte’s sixty-something live-out Irish nanny.
Sophie – Ethan and Kim’s daughter. The birthday girl.
Mikayla – Sophie’s best friend. A down-to-earth Texan farm girl
Mason – Sophie’s ex-boyfriend. Quarterback on the football team.
Curtis – Ethan’s best friend. Dani’s psychiatrist.
Gemma – Curtis’s wife.
Before starting, I mistakingly thought that Party of Liars was YA since it was set during a sixteenth birthday party. I was wrong, this was a psychological thriller/family drama/gothic horror for an adult audience, and only one of the narrators was a teenager. I was also expecting more of a soap opera style plot with bitchy gossipy behaviour, and there was some glamour, glitz, and indulgence, but all the characters, even the minor ones, were surprisingly likeable, deep, and grounded, well fleshed out, with compelling backstories, and tantalising hints of secrets. There were humorous moments as well – I laughed aloud several times.
Party of Liars was creepy, eerie, and haunting, steeped in superstition, folklore, and a house with a dark, mysterious history. This added ambiguity as I wondered if the danger surrounding the characters was supernatural, whether they were being gaslit or toyed with by someone to make them seem crazy, or was their own guilt, grief, or bitterness playing on their minds causing them to imagine things. The modern mansion setting where everything appeared perfect, stylish, and beautiful was an illusion, a façade disguising something rotten. Just beneath the surface was the abandoned, crumbling, derelict, and feared bones of the original house. Speaking of the house it was a character in itself – its rooms seemed endless and disorientating to the point that it appeared as if the very house itself was expanding and multiplying – every few chapters of the party would find the character narrating in a different wing, level, outbuilding or grounds of the house. Plenty of nooks and crannies to escape, hide, lurk, and spy.
Party of Liars contained three parts. Before the Party introduced the four main alternating narrators – Dani, Kim, Mikayla, and Orlaith. The Night of the Party comprised the bulk of the novel and events unfolded in real time in a pressure cooker environment. I waited with bated breath wondering who was going to be murdered, why, by whom, and when it was going to happen. I made sure to listen carefully knowing that every thought, detail, and conversation mattered. After the Party featured POV’s of guests on the periphery of the party offering their impressions and interpretations of the tragedy which heightened tension and gave the plot more realism and dread. The twists were phenomenal with excellent use of misdirection and red herrings. Kelsey Cox sure had me fooled – every time I thought I had something figured out she pulled the rug out from under me and made me second guess myself.
I had no complaints regarding the audio reading but at the same time there wasn’t anything that really stood out for me to make it special. I did enjoy the Texan and Irish accents though.
What an author! I eagerly await Kelsey Cox’s next thriller.
I’d like to thank Netgalley, Hodder and Stoughton audio, and Kelsey Cox for the audio-ARC.
Publication Date: 3rd July 2025.