Bearing shovels and a pickax, they made their way up the hill that morning.
Four teens dig up a time capsule that their parents buried in 1986 and never returned to dig up. In the capsule, they find something unexpected, a bloody knife and a note that says "I'm sorry. I didn't mean to kill anyone." One of the teens is attacked by a masked man and nearly killed, pushing them to want to solve this mystery before it is too late. But can they trust their own parents? Or is one of them a killer, who will stop at nothing to keep their secret?
I always enjoy a good Barry Lyga book, but I didn't love this one as much as his others that I have read. I did love the switching between the main teens in 2021 and their parents as teens in 1986. It was great piecing together the mystery through reading both timelines. There were things I picked up on before the characters did, but Lyga did a great job building the suspense. I enjoyed most of the main characters. I also appreciated how the story incorporated various world events and crises including the Challenger explosion, AIDS epidemic, 9/11 attacks, and COVID pandemic.
There were a few things that I did not like about the book. First of all, it feels very bloated. I feel like it could have been about 100 pages shorter. There are multiple scenes that feel almost like a copy/paste job of previous scenes and don't do much to move the story along. There were also more characters than there needed to be (why was Brian even there?), which caused a lot of confusion. I also found the book to be very heavy-handed regarding politics and social issues in 2021 (maybe Lyga trying to appeal to a Gen Z audience?). It also seemed more repetitive than it needed to be.
This wasn't Lyga's best work, but could still be appealing to those who enjoy mysteries and stories that cover multiple timelines, especially older teens.
CW: bullying, depression, gore, homophobia (including slurs), incarceration, infidelity, institutionalization, kidnapping/abduction, medical procedures, murder, pedophilia, racist language, self-harm, sexual content (one detailed sex scene, otherwise just making out), stalking, swearing (brief strong language), violence (characters are stabbed and beaten up)