She watched a killer hunt. The people she trusted were hiding everything.
I haven’t left my apartment in two years.
Not since the night I watched my best friend get attacked—and no one believed me. Not since the police dismissed my testimony because I’d been drinking. Not since Claire disappeared from my life, and I blamed myself for not saving her.
Now I watch the world through a webcam feed of the Gullhaven Boardwalk. It’s safer this way. Predictable. I catalog the regulars—Jogger Jim, Bench Betty, Phone Guy. I know their patterns. I understand their routines.
Then she appears.
A woman exhibiting behavior I’ve never seen before. Erratic movements. Responding to invisible instructions. Terror written across her body as she backs away from empty space.
By morning, she’s been reported missing from the Gullhaven Grand Hotel.
I should let it go.
Everyone tells me I’m unreliable. My therapist says I’m projecting trauma from Claire’s attack. The detective says I’m seeing patterns that don’t exist. But I’m a data analyst—pattern recognition is what I do.
And the pattern is undeniable.
More victims appear on my webcam, all performing the same terrifying choreography before vanishing toward the beach. The hotel’s night manager gives suspiciously identical statements. Evidence corrupts itself on my devices. My therapist pushes stronger medication to “help with my paranoid thinking.”
The people who should be helping me solve this case seem determined to make me doubt my own sanity.
But what if my instincts are right? What if the two people I trust the most—the therapist and the detective—are the very ones I should fear?
What She Saw is a gripping psychological thriller that explores trauma, surveillance, and the fragility of truth. With escalating tension, gaslighting power dynamics, and relentless twists, it delivers an ending that lingers long after the final page.
Parker Kirby, an agoraphobic young woman, watches the world through a webcam. After the death of her roommate, she has trouble navigating life. Watching through her webcam, she thinks she sees a pattern of a serial killer.. This book that builds tension from the first page. There's danger, manipulation, and fear. Parker sticks to it, Will her determination, bravery and diligence secure her survival? I think this is probably my favorite Shaw book. I am definitely looking forward to the next one!.
I received a free copy of this book and am voluntarily leaving a review.
Another great Shelby Shaw read, and with only around 160 pages short, it can be easily read in one sitting. Also, just like in the previous books, it keeps you gripped from the very first sentence. I was rooting for Parker, and I am sure you will be as well once you get the book into your hands!
This was an interesting story. Nice twists towards the end. The reader isn't sure whether to believe what Parker saw or thinks she saw. It was all being viewed through a webcam. As time goes on and Parker starts putting more pieces together, the story builds to a satisfying end.