Shona just wants to live happily ever after. So when she gives up her career as a journalist in Glasgow to move with her partner, Mikey and their new baby to the perfect cottage in the Aberdeenshire countryside, it looks as though all her wishes are coming true. Mikey has to take a job offshore, and Shona finds herself isolated in the cottage in the woods. But still blissed out with happiness and her new baby she is determined not to let the isolation beat her. She goes in search of friendship and is easy pickings for the charismatic and dangerous Valentina. Valentina seems perfect, she too has a new baby and time on her hands. The two quickly become friends, best friends even and of course as everyone knows, best friends share everything.
This is a fast paced, intelligent, twist and turn psychological thriller in the same vein as Gone Girl and Girl on a Train. However, that is about as far as similarities go. Set in and around Aberdeen, the location is almost as much a character in this book as Valentina, Shona and Mikey. When the young couple, Shona and Mikey drive out to their new cottage in the woods, the haar - a dense, clinging fog that drops down onto the landscape like a foreshadowing of what is to come - seems to be chasing them away. Lynes weaves her magic using her knowledge of the area, it’s weather and geography with a deft understanding of place and combines this with a perception of human frailties to create a twisting tale that will both satisfy and intrigue the most demanding of reading palates.
It is a story of outsiders, not just those who feel on the outside when they are new to an area, or incomers, but also to an extent the way women are outsiders to their own lives once they have children. When Shona has Isla she is removed from her old world physically, mentally and spiritually, and her sense of isolation strips her of her guard, making her vulnerable to Valentina's manipulation. We've all known Valentina's in our lives, the glamorous friend, who starts off by making us feel flattered and special and then somehow starts to make us feel a little bit less than we are, diminished and beholden. This novel is a beautifully elegant study of psychopathic manipulation and it is with exquisite pacing S E Lynes leads us to an explosive ending.