Rounded up to 4.5 stars
Adam believes he’s the perfect boyfriend. The romantic secret admirer type in his eyes. The nightmarish stalker type in theirs. He gives flowers and gifts to the woman he loves. He does her shopping and chores. By the time he steps out of the shadows to introduce himself, he expects gratitude and love, but what he gets is betrayal and fear. After the unplanned murder of the first woman who rejects him, Adam realizes the only way they’ll be able to love him forever is if he kills them. But when he sees Laura, he’s convinced she’s unlike the rest. She loves him. She really loves him. This time, it can be different.
Four years ago, Laura lost her mother, brother, and father in a car crash. Since then, she’s spent her life waiting to die instead of moving forward. However, after a difficult conversation with her aunt, she decides to try to change all that. She makes new friends. She starts to enjoy living. When she starts noticing strange things going on inside her flat, such as flowers or shopping she doesn’t recall buying, she chalks it up to forgetfulness and still-buried grief. By the time she realizes she has a stalker, Laura’s ready to do anything to fight to live. But Adam’s watching, and she’s making him angrier than perhaps he’s ever been…
Unsettling, sinister, yet deeply intriguing, “Flowers for the Dead” by Barbara Copperthwaite is a serial killer thriller that, at times, reads like a story ripped straight from the headlines. Not the standard fast-paced thriller by any means, “Flowers for the Dead” moves along at its own steady pace, taking time to develop the story, build up characters, and create an atmosphere of dread. For a good portion of the book, Adam’s and Laura’s paths don’t cross. They are like two trains unknowingly heading toward each other on the same track. You know disaster is becoming more imminent the closer they get, and you’re filled with a sense of foreboding. As a result, the climax can only be described as explosive and the conclusion extremely satisfying.