I wanted to enjoy this book more, and it certainly wasn't bad. But there were some aspects that I just couldn't quite get past.
The premise was good and the book started out fairly strong. Apart from the fact that this book jumps around a lot, and with no warning. It could be the formatting on kindle that caused this (it seemed to default on endless scroll, which is not my usual preference, but I grew too tired of changing it given how sporadically I read the book), but one second I was reading about Hannah, and then the very next paragraph I was somewhere completely different, reading from the perspective of Adam. Whenever this happened, I'd get lost or confused, and I'd have to go back and reread that bit to see exactly where the transition occurred, because there was no space between paragraphs to indicate that a shift in point of view had happened in the first place.
In addition to this, I just felt that at certain points, the book was rushed. It skipped around quickly between point of views and the plot, that sometimes I had a difficult time connecting all of it. There were so many names that I occasionally forgot who was who, and I feel that part of that is because the characters weren't always fully fleshed out. I got a basic premise of each character, but enough substance to really make me care about any of them, or to make them memorable. That's not to say the characters were bad. I did find a few to be rather tropey, but that wasn't the issue; I expected that. It was that I kind of wanted more from them, but didn't receive more.
Not that it matters, but I can't tell if this is YA or adult? That has no basis on my review, but I am genuinely curious, because we follow a teenager and an adult, and there are themes present in books for both age groups. Is this what they call new adult? I have no idea. I don't recall when this was published (I suppose I could look it up), but it reminded me quite a bit of the YA books so common around the Twilight era. But with some slightly more adult themes?
Unfortunately, my biggest issue was the grammatical issues. I believe this was self-published, and as such, likely was never put through a rigorous editing process. But sometimes I couldn't help but feel that the novel was only written once, looked over briefly, and then...published. Most books - even traditionally published books - have some kind of error in them. But this book had several, which ultimately wasn't a huge issue, but it clearly left some impression for me to bring it up here. It also did a lot of telling instead of showing, which isn't always a bad thing. But sometimes I really wanted more! I wanted to see the séance, not hear about it after (especially as I think that was meant to be the climax? Or at least a pivotal moment in the story regarding critical information). I wanted to feel the atmosphere, not be told about it. If some points were fleshed out a little more, I don't think this would have been an issue. There were a lot of critical elements to the story (namely, those which connected Hannah and her family to the supernatural) that didn't quite make sense, or that were sprung on us without much of an explanation.
Again, not a bad book, and I do think this book had promise. History, haunted manors, ghosts? It's gothic lit, but modern day. And that's not to say I won't continue with the series. But it's not without its flaws, which unfortunately made a larger impression than did the rest of the novel.