(Warning: spoilers!) Barbara Rogan has been doing her thing for quite a while, but I'd never heard of her, like so many great writers. The number of authors who fly under my radar is shameful. I was so excited when I saw her name (discovered through an agent I follow on Twitter), and this book really grabbed my attention because it has all the elements I love: past trauma, mystery, ghosts, a tower library overlooking stormy seas, what's not to love?
Emma Roth is an author of ghost stories who doesn't believe in ghosts. She has a husband who's kind of a dick, a sister who's kind of a dick, and a ghost in her library that's kind of a dick. The story begins with her husband convincing her to leave the city and move to Long Island, and she is swayed when she is introduced to the amazing tower library in the old Victorian house that is inhabited by a grammar-stickler ghost. We follow Emma as she descends into paranoia and suspicion as inexplicable events happen in her house, and it seems something malevolent and threatening is looming just out of reach.
All that sounds great, which is why I don't understand why so much of this book is spent describing a little boy's soccer games. I don't mind that there's two separate explanations for what's happening in her life, but neither one is any kind of surprise, and there's not really much by way of twists and turns. That Emma had a nervous breakdown after causing a car accident that kills a father and daughter is understandable, but for me, she didn't spend nearly enough time questioning her own sanity for someone who'd actually gone insane once before. Overall, I felt like this book made a lot of promises that weren't kept and spent a little too much time delving into introspection on the nature of things and not enough time creating tension and surprise. Also, the POV changes were especially jarring and, quite frankly, unnecessary. I wondered through the entire story why it wasn't told in first person from Emma's point of view to create a bit more vertigo.
However, Rogan did create several avenues to explore as far as explaining the troubles, and I did have at least a little bit of doubt about the trustworthiness of every character. Unfortunately, for a book where the main premise is a woman in physical and psychological peril, I never really felt frightened for Emma, and she came off as such a willing victim I doubt I would've cared if something terrible did happen to her. I do think this book is worth a read, just go in expecting more of a domestic suspense novel and not a scary ghost tale or a psychological thriller.