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Boom Town

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Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl meets P-Valley in Nic Stone’s adult thriller debut about two missing erotic dancers from Atlanta’s most notorious gentlemen's club and the woman committed to finding them.

When Damaris “Charm” Wilburn, a new daytime dancer, is missing for her shift at Boom Town, former headliner Michah “Lyriq” Johanssen suspects something more than a “no call, no show.” As Lyriq’s former headline partner and lover—Felice “Lucky” Carothers—also vanished under similar circumstances, Lyriq decides she’s going to find them.

Delving deeper into Charm and Lucky’s disappearances, Lyriq uncovers a tangled web of deceit, privilege, and power. The line between friend and foe blurs, forcing Lyriq to confront the question: Is finding for these women worth the threat to her own life?

This tantalizing thriller will take you on a heart-pounding and page turning journey through the peaks and valleys of Atlanta’s underworld.

1 pages, Audio CD

First published October 14, 2025

201 people are currently reading
37376 people want to read

About the author

Nic Stone

45 books4,618 followers
Nic Stone was born and raised in a suburb of Atlanta, GA, and the only thing she loves more than an adventure is a good story about one. After graduating from Spelman College, she worked extensively in teen mentoring and lived in Israel for a few years before returning to the US to write full-time. Growing up with a wide range of cultures, religions, and backgrounds, Stone strives to bring these diverse voices and stories to her work.

Stone lives in Atlanta with her husband and two sons. You can find her on Twitter and Instagram at @getnicced or on her website nicstone.info.

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5 stars
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570 (38%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 450 reviews
Profile Image for Nilufer Ozmekik.
3,116 reviews60.6k followers
December 4, 2025
Boom Town is a gritty, haunting, and emotionally charged thrill ride that peels back the layers of glitz, power, and pain in Atlanta’s underground nightlife. In her adult thriller debut, Nic Stone delivers a bold and fearless narrative that doesn’t just entertain—it confronts, questions, and cuts deep.

From the opening chapter, you know this isn’t your average whodunnit. The mystery begins when Damaris “Charm” Wilburn—one of the newer dancers at Boom Town, the city’s most infamous gentlemen’s club—fails to show up for her shift. For most, it might be written off as a no-show. But for Michah “Lyriq” Johanssen, a former headliner who’s danced her way through pain and power struggles alike, it triggers something deeper. Especially because another dancer—Lyriq’s former partner and secret lover, Felice “Lucky” Carothers—disappeared in eerily similar fashion not long before.

What begins as a search turns into a descent—into a maze of hidden agendas, buried trauma, and the invisible ways society fails to protect women like Charm and Lucky. As Lyriq starts asking questions no one wants to answer, the tension escalates fast, and so does the danger. Every lead opens another door, every conversation adds a new piece to the puzzle, and every answer seems to reveal a darker truth.

Stone writes with intensity and empathy, illuminating the spaces where justice is often an afterthought—particularly when the missing are Black women working in industries that society deems disposable. But here, these women aren’t background noise—they are the heart of the story. Complicated, strong, flawed, loving, angry, afraid, and determined. Lyriq, in particular, is a standout—a woman shaped by loss, fueled by loyalty, and unafraid to dive into the fire to get the truth, even when the world around her would rather she disappear too.

The pacing ebbs and flows—some parts burn slow while others hit with explosive force—but that uneven rhythm feels reflective of real investigation: moments of frustration, followed by breakthroughs, then the weight of what those discoveries mean. The multiple points of view and time jumps require your attention, but they also reward it, adding depth and complexity to the unfolding narrative. Each layer you peel back reveals something more unsettling than the last.

What struck me most was how Boom Town walks a fine line between thriller and social commentary. It grips you with suspense, then quietly delivers gut punches of truth—about gender, race, class, power, and the silence that protects abusers. It's unapologetically raw, unapologetically Black, and deeply resonant.

This isn’t just a story about missing women. It’s a story about who’s allowed to go missing without consequence—and who dares to refuse invisibility. Lyriq’s relentless pursuit of answers becomes a powerful act of resistance, of care, and ultimately, of justice.

A very huge thank you to NetGalley and Simon & Schuster for sharing this thought-provoking, intense thriller’s digital reviewer copy with me in exchange for my honest thoughts. This one will linger long after the final page—it’s bold, it’s fierce, and it matters.

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Profile Image for Maren’s Reads.
1,188 reviews2,197 followers
September 28, 2025
Nic Stone’s foray into the world of adult fiction in the form of a sapphic literary thriller, featuring pitch perfect social commentary on the lack of attention missing women of color receive, was just as good as I anticipated it to be. Those who enjoyed We Don’t Talk About Carol should add this to their radar.

📆 Pubs: October 14, 2025

Thank you Simon Books and Simon Audio for the advanced copies.

Profile Image for Laura.
391 reviews98 followers
October 8, 2025
First thing, I want to say this book has some trigger warnings for sexual abuse and domestic violence.

This book was a fairly good read. It was really kind of an odd story of strange obsession, from several different characters. There is a couple of different story lines that merge at the end, but there were a few times I was like, how is this important? But it was a well written, quick read, just make sure you can handle the subject content.

Thank you to Net Galley and Simon and Schuster for giving me this ARC in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Rae | My Cousin’s Book Club.
268 reviews51 followers
August 6, 2025
FIVE FREAKING STARS!!!!! I will be recommending this book to anyone that listens!

Wow that ending just had me floored!! I absolutely devoured this book. It's a mystery + psychological thriller + plus women's fiction & that combo was literally the perfect balance.

The multiple POVs provide an insight into the mindset of each character and honey that epilogue really brought me to tears. Getting a peek into the past & present also heightened my questions of what really happened to Charm & Lucky. The fact that two missing dancers are linked to the same person had me on the edge of my seat. And the interconnectedness of them all came together in the best way possible.

And let's be honest, any book set in ATL has me intrigued. I love the small nuances like Boom Town, Purple Unicorn and the descriptions of areas I know.

Nic Stone is an auto-buy author for me and her first adult novel really took it up a notch!

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for an advanced copy of this book. Opinions are completely my own.
Profile Image for AndaReadsTooMuch.
390 reviews19 followers
October 4, 2025
This book has such an interesting premise, I was drawn to the synopsis and real life events this book shadows. We are launched into two main characters, Lucky and Lyriq in a dual POV. Lucky and Lyriq are dancers at the hottest strip club in Atlanta. Lucky mysteriously disappears and Lyriq is forced to move on. Another young dancer goes missing under similar circumstances and Lyriq resolves to find out what happened.

I struggled with this one and I can’t put my finger on why. The dual POV was also a time skip, so you were going back in time for Lucky’s POV and then forward for Lyriq’s. And of course, Lucky and Lyriq are stage names, however the author uses their real and stage names somewhat interchangeably. Often there’s nicknames thrown in, too. I felt like a few times I couldn’t figure out who was telling the story or who they were talking to. I love what Nic Stone was going for, but I don’t think it quite got there for me. There were quite a few times I felt like this was hard to read, the prose was clunky and overly descriptive on minor plot points and not descriptive enough on the big ones. I have to give Stone props. It’s hard to be a YA author and make the transition to adult fiction. While this book wasn’t for me, I feel like she’s going to find her sweet spot soon and be a powerhouse. I will be looking out for her future works!

Thank you to Simon & Schuster for providing this ARC for review consideration via NetGalley. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Angie Miale.
1,100 reviews141 followers
July 20, 2025
Friends, this book was not for me. This is a novel about a group of exotic dancers at a club in Atlanta called Boom Town. I really appreciate that the author wanted to tell the story of women who go missing that are the ones no one talks about. Women of color, exotic dancers, sex workers. However, I had a hard time following this one.

The main reason why is because I had a tough time keeping the character straight. All of the women dancers have a given name, as well as a stage name, and sometimes also a nickname. I could really remember their storylines and kept having to go back and re-read. The narrative also jumps back-and-forth between the present time and a year ago, and reading on Kindle. It was easy to get mixed up in what time period i was reading. I also Didn’t really visualize the age differences appropriately, which made the ending a little more confusing.

The characters in general just didn’t seem well developed to me, and I did find the nature of the book to be a bit disturbing.

So while this story wasn’t my favorite, I could see others enjoying it due to the provocative, gritty setting.

Thanks to NetGalley and Simon and Schuster for the ARC. Book to be published 10/14/25
Profile Image for Dennis.
1,077 reviews2,052 followers
September 9, 2025
Nic Stone’s adult debut BOOM TOWN was one of my most anticipated fall 2025 reads so I was floored when @simonbooks sent me a copy for review, thank you! I love any book set in at a strip club and I knew that the messaging was of subject matter that needs to be talked about—when Black women go missing, they do not receive the same media outrage that white women do.

When two erotic dancers vanish from Atlanta’s notorious Boom Town club, former headliner Michah “Lyriq” Johanssen sets out to uncover the truth, drawn in by the disappearance of her former partner and lover as well. As Lyriq searches, she’s forced to navigate a dangerous web of deceit, privilege, and power, questioning whether finding the missing women is worth risking her own life.

This book isn’t really a deeply intricate mystery—you kind of know early on what’s happening. That doesn’t take away from my enjoyment of the story, but go into this book knowing it’s more of a literary fiction than a mystery/thriller. It’s a slower paced novel that took longer than I wanted to given how short it is, but I enjoyed the ride and I hope Nic Stone continues to write adult fiction.
Profile Image for Glenda Nelms.
764 reviews15 followers
May 28, 2025

CW: human trafficking, rape, sexual assault,

Boom Town is a twisty, deep and gripping story on the dark side of Atlanta, Georgia. Two dancers who go missing and a third who commits to solving the mystery of what happened to them. Throughout the novel we get various perspectives, slowly revealing what happened before and after each woman goes missing. It focuses on the intriguing world of strip/dance clubs, sisterhood, survival and safety. This is Nic Stone’s first adult novel. Stone highlights the sights and sounds of Atlanta.

The issues that the book brings up are the social commentary of racial and sexual power dynamics, the invisibility of Black women.
Profile Image for Nancy Yager.
92 reviews13 followers
September 16, 2025
Boom Town by Nic Stone is a mystery thriller centered on three exotic dancers in Atlanta, told from all of their perspectives. The book dives into the darker side of the industry, touching on the dangers of sex trafficking while layering in mystery and suspense. I really enjoyed the thriller aspects, the tension, the danger, and the sense that something sinister was always just beneath the surface.

That said, I did find myself wishing for more from the characters. With so many nicknames being used, it sometimes became confusing to keep track of who was who, and it kept me from connecting with them in a deeper way. I also thought the book might explore Atlanta itself more fully, giving the city a stronger presence as a backdrop to the story.

Overall, Nic Stone captures the stakes of the world these women live in, but I felt the execution left room for a richer understanding of the workers themselves. Still, the mystery held my attention and kept me reading through to the end.

Thank you to Netgalley and Simon & Schuster for the advanced readers’ copy of the book.
Profile Image for chasc.taylor_reads.
423 reviews30 followers
October 20, 2025
4.25 Stars ✨

If you’re needing a quick and captivating story — pick this one up! I easily binged this one over a few hours. The audiobook has several narrators and was well done.

I found this the tiniest bit predictable and it took a little bit to settle into the character names (we get stage names, real names, pet names, etc to identify characters), which is why this didn’t get a full 5 stars from me.

Note: I read this immersively (audio and ebook) to make sure I was retaining all the info. Between the various names, POV changes, and Before vs Current timelines, I could see this becoming confusing for some.

Nonetheless, this was enjoyable and had solid pacing for a thriller!

📚Eeekk just realized this is my 200th book of 2025! This is certainly a memorable one to hit that milestone!📚
Profile Image for Erin Rae.
361 reviews24 followers
December 15, 2025
The multiple POVs threw me off. You have to really focus when listening. I’m going to have to listen again 😩
Profile Image for Lit_Vibrations .
412 reviews37 followers
June 28, 2025
Rule #245 NO CRYING AT THE PYNK

Special thanks to the author & @simonandschuster for my gifted copy‼️

Most people know Nic Stone for being a YA author but sis took a step on the wild side with her new adult thriller debut Boom Town. They said this was Gone Girl meets P-Valley but it’s more like Players Club meets P-Valley.

When former headliner Michah aka Lyriq returns to work her dance partner in crime and secret lover Felice “Lucky” is nowhere to be found. Lyriq doesn’t find it suspicious until another dancer Damaris “Charm” also goes missing. This could’ve just been a coincidence but Lyriq knew better than that. And when she discovers the two may have been involved with the same club regular red flags go up and she’s determined to get to the bottom of it.

The book does start off a bit slow and may confuse you because the author uses their real names and stage names. But when things hit the fan there’s an overflow of drama, tension, and a bit of violence thrown in the mix. Bones was a shady business owner and I felt like he always knew more than he was willing to say. Once Thomas McIntyre is introduced his character is exactly who you think he’s gonna be. All I will say is he is Myron from Player’s Club but white lol.

The author did a great job building up the suspense but by part 4 things start to fall flat. I loved the direction she was going with it and how she continuously twisted the plot to make things connect. But there still ended up being too many plot holes and I hate being left with unanswered questions. The author failed to give us the why behind it all. I also didn’t like how the book ended but that could just be me.

Overall, this was very entertaining just be prepared for the multitude of characters and how quickly things transition from one character to the next. The pacing was up and down and with the book being broken into 4 parts things really didn’t pick up until we get closer to part 2. I get why the author chose to write such a story but I don’t think her message came across clearly. However, I loved it and recommend you guys read it.
Profile Image for Joanna.
508 reviews117 followers
November 4, 2025
When young adult authors make the leap into adult fiction, the transition can sometimes feel like a half-step—the youthfulness of YA just with aged up characters. But, Nic Stone has kicked the door down with her adult debut novel, Boom Town, a dark investigative thriller.

Part Gone Girl, part P Valley, with echoes of Player’s Club and Hustle and Flow, Boom Town plunges readers into the neon-lit underworld of Atlanta’s most infamous Black strip club. When two erotic dancers vanish without a trace, one woman determined to uncover the truth. What unfolds is a dark, moody, socially aware mystery that delves into who holds power, who disappears, and how race and sex dictate the rules of the game.

What I especially appreciated was that Stone doesn’t frame the world of exotic dancing as negative or positive -- she simply lays out the facts and lets the story speak for itself. That level of narrative restraint is uncommon and powerful.

Boom Town was everything I hoped and expected it to be. It is dark, moody, and unapologetically raw. I was hooked from the very first sentence—I couldn't turn the pages fast enough and devoured this book in one day.

Boom Town is out now.

Many thanks to Netgalley, Simon & Schuster, and Nic Stone for the advanced digital copy.
Profile Image for Katie B.
1,723 reviews3,173 followers
October 19, 2025
Thank you Simon and Schuster and Netgalley for providing a free advance digital copy!

3.75⭐️ out of 5

Two exotic dancers working at Atlanta’s Boom Town strip club have gone missing. A former headliner at the place, Micah “Lyriq” Johanssen is searching for answers in regards to their disappearance but digging deep for the truth might come at a terrible cost.

I read mysteries and thrillers fairly often and I appreciate the author offering something different for readers. It’s important to note that so many victims involved in the sex industry are often dismissed, overlooked, forgotten, you name it. They are people who have hopes and dreams and fears just like the rest of us. I like how they were given a voice in this story and it serves as a reminder we as a society need to stop latching on to this so called perfect victim bs.

As much as I liked what this novel brought to the table, some things got lost in the shuffle. There was some room for development with both the plot and characters. Even with that small criticism, I still say it’s a book worth reading.
Profile Image for Ana Elizondo.
257 reviews
December 18, 2025
I liked how this was less "whodunnit" and more "wake up!! and see what the world ignores".
Profile Image for Mai H..
1,352 reviews792 followers
2025
October 3, 2025
Black History Month TBR

📱 Thank you to NetGalley and Simon & Schuster
Profile Image for Marissa Hernandez.
320 reviews
November 4, 2025
what a twisty read. this book kept me engaged and wanting to know how this story was going to end. the twist toward the end of the book really had me shook. I loved the different povS and timelines. heavy subject matter so please read trigger warnings. the characters were thoroughly developed and felt very dimensional.

thank you to netgalley and Simon and shuster for an advance readers copy for my honest review.
Profile Image for ReadingTilTheBreakOfDawn.
1,942 reviews104 followers
September 14, 2025
Boom town is Nic Stone's debut adult thriller(ish) and has a great premise. After having read her MG and YA books, I knew Stone would give us something gritty, different and with a message. And with comparing it to Gone Girl meets P-Valley, my expectations were high.

We are brought into the story with missing women (and a body part) all set in Atlanta and in the sex worker industry. Told from multiple POVs and a past present timeline, the story builds up to what made these women go missing and what connected these women.

Usually having multiple POVs does not confuse me as much as this one did, but I think it was simply the names (Lucky and Lyriq) and the fact that the names were also interchanged. Given names, with dancer names with nicknames. I couldn't keep the point of views straight and had to keep referring back to the beginning of the chapter to see who we were talking about. For that reason, I was continuously pulled out of the story, even though the idea was there. It just lacked the execution to keep me on my toes.

Taking that into account, I still liked the idea of the story with sex workers and how that all came together with treatment from a certain white client (check the content warnings) as well as a past connection that at once seemed irrelevant. A faster paced story that was not too terribly long, Boom Town is like a mix of social commentary with an edgy mystery/thriller that definitely has potential, but didn't hit quite like how I expected. Still worth a read for the subject matter alone.
Profile Image for Audrey.
2,110 reviews121 followers
June 26, 2025
Nic Stone's adult debut is a page turner. Lyriq, an exotic dancer, searches for her missing friend, after another young woman at her club disappears. Filled with twists and turns, her investigation focuses on a wealthy white man who has an obsession with her friend and all who resemble her. This read interrogates, power and race as well as those who are looked down upon, because of their less than professions.

I received an arc from the publisher but all opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Gemini.
1,653 reviews
October 15, 2025
Okay

I love Nic Stone’s work, but this wasn’t a favorite of mine. It had a slow start. I was struggling to keep the characters straight. Towards the middle, the story picked up. I was getting into it. Then the storyline started to feel convoluted. It was interesting enough to keep reading, but it didn’t win me over. I feel like I should read it again at a later date to see if I can connect with it.
Profile Image for Andrea D. Baker.
48 reviews
December 7, 2025
I would give it a 4.5, but you know… Goodreads.

I really enjoyed this book. I think the characters were raw and the tale was gritty. I thought I knew what to expect going in, but I was pleasantly surprised to get even more.
Profile Image for Amber.
304 reviews5 followers
October 11, 2025
Nic Stone is a gem of a human, and the care she takes with her readers to make them feel seen and heard is captivating--I've witnessed that in person multiple times. This time, the best-selling YA author is dipping her toe into the adult mystery/thriller/women's fiction space with her newest release, Boom Town, and the empathy and respect she shows her main characters, all sex workers at a prestigious Atlanta club, is no different. Lyriq (Michah) and Lucky (Felice) are known for their dance duos at Boom Town that draw cheers, money, and private dances, and in secret, they are deeply in love. When a breast cancer diagnosis forces Lyriq away and into herself, and Lucky draws the attention of a wealthy, white patron, and suddenly disappears, Lyriq focuses on her health and trying to afford breast reconstruction, assuming Lucky just stopped loving her. But after she hires Charm (Damaris), a new dancer with an uncanny resemblance to Lucky, and she too disappears, Lyric knows the common denominator is Thomas McIntyre-- a rich investor who uses his money and prestige to control women.

As Lyriq investigates, the danger escalates and the plot spins into a fast-moving web of tension told from all the girls' points of view, including McIntyre's wife. Stone loves an epistolary element, and diary/letter entries between Lyric and Damaris help to not only connect the two, but flesh out the fear both women feel at the hands of Thomas. Social commentary is weaved throughout, examining the dark underbelly of Atlanta's nightclub life with the exploitation of black women and then juxtaposed with how sisterhood can help save women from the power and privilege of those who seek to harm them. Stone's discussion of race, gender, and class is always spot on, and I love how she humanizes all of her characters and builds toward an explosive epilogue. There were times in the beginning when the dual timeline and interchangeable character nicknames and names slowed down the pacing, but I worked through that and was rewarded with a gritty, provocative narrative that shows the depths of human love and resistance.

Content warnings: drugs, alcohol, rape, infertility, teen pregnancy, religious bigotry.


Thank you to Simon & Schuster and Netgalley for the e-ARC! This one is out October 14, 2025.
Profile Image for Lois.
128 reviews1 follower
November 16, 2025
The ending felt rushed.🤷🏾‍♀️
Profile Image for Ebony (whatebonyreads).
123 reviews14 followers
November 13, 2025
I’ve heard some people describe this book as a mix between Gone Girl and P Valley. In my opinion, this is more like Playas Club and Six Degrees of Separation having a baby.

Once you get into the story, there are so many twists that you won’t be able to put the book down. Having the story told through the perspectives of each of our main characters only added to the story. The further you read, the more layers are peeled off the plot like an onion, only this one brings no tears.

I am recommending this book to anyone who loves a good story, especially my Black book girls and guys. The story is too good to remain unread by anyone.
Profile Image for Nicholas Mccane.
128 reviews10 followers
November 3, 2025
Welcome to the Boom Town, the most notorious Black strip club in the A (Atlanta). This book is about two dancers, one new (Charm) and one well-known headliner (Lucky), who both vanish without a trace. Both women share a connection: They’re linked to a dangerous, powerful, and wealthy man.

Lyriq, another headliner, who is close friends and ex-partner to Lucky, tries to figure out what is going on. But does she have what it takes to save these women before it’s too late?

This was my first read by Nic Stone. The book started out a little confusing, only because the author uses both the dancer’s real names and stage names. Plus, two of the main characters’ first names start with an L. On more than one occasion, I confused Lyriq with Lucky and vice versa. Check your triggers because there is violence, SA, and drama throughout this. Basically, everything you would expect from a story about the most infamous strip club in Atlanta.

Once I got comfortable with everyone’s names and the story started moving, Nic Stone took us on a ride. The author was descriptive. The storytelling, along with the physical copy and audiobook, allowed me to fully immerse into this world.

Nic Stone normally writes YA. This was her first attempt at an adult novel, and I felt like she did great. This would have been a five-star read for me if it weren’t for two things.

I struggled early on with who was who.

The buildup was intense and suspenseful, but then the climax felt rushed and flat.

I’m definitely going back to read her YA novels. She gained another fan.
Profile Image for Regan, Maze, and MK.
288 reviews28 followers
July 15, 2025
Oh this was GOOD. Thank you to Simon & Schuster for the free copy for review. As always, all opinions are my own and are not influenced by receiving an eARC and review copy.

I struggle with insomnia and I woke up yesterday at around 2:30AM and I decided to pick up this book again to read a few pages before falling asleep. But it was so good that instead of putting my brain back to sleep, I stayed awake until I finished it.

There are a lot of characters and anyone who is a dancer has two names, their real name and their stage name. Some people may want to make an index card or small note to keep track of who is who, but I didn’t find it too hard to keep track since the voices and personality for each of the characters seemed so distinctive to me. The last few chapters, I was frantically flipping back to all of the notes and highlights I had made, wondering how I had missed all of the clues that the author had laid out. That is what makes a good thriller to me. An author whose twists pack a punch, but not because they come out of nowhere—but because the reader missed them.

I also really enjoyed the limited use of mixed media through news reporting. It expertly built tension and made me incredibly worried for characters that I had come to worry about in a short period of time.

Slight pacing issues and a too neat wrap up for my taste is what makes this a four star read instead of five for me, but this book pulled me out of a slump. I did guess one of the big twists, but not the how.

I would recommend for people who enjoy thrillers written by S.A. Cosby. This was a fantastic adult thriller debut by Nic Stone.

Check your trigger warnings here because there are many, but the biggest one is sexual assault which is described multiple times.
Profile Image for Lit_eraryqueen (Salena C.) .
55 reviews14 followers
October 31, 2025
Boom Town is a thrilling ride into the world of 2 missing Black Women that work as exotic dancers in Atlanta. I was definitely intrigued by the storyline and wanting to know what happened to these women?!?!
While some parts of the book dragged a little bit and it was hard to keep up with interchangeable character names, I did enjoy the book overall.
It was clear who the villians were, but some surprising characters along the way! A great read to finish out spooky season.
Profile Image for ReadnliftwithShar.
1,854 reviews
October 31, 2025
I hope Nic Stone explores more stories in this genre because I enjoyed it. The suspense and twists were good and I was curious to see how the characters were connected. I will say, the reveal chapter was a little hard to follow and I had to read it twice to make sure I didn’t miss any details. Highly recommend the audiobook.
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