Perfect town. Perfect homes. Perfect families. It’s enough to drive some women mad…
In a tale inspired by real events, pregnant journalist Joan Harken is cautiously excited to follow her fiancé back to his Minnesota hometown. After spending a childhood on the move and chasing the screams and swirls of news-rich city life, she’s eager to settle down. Lilydale’s motto, “Come Home Forever,” couldn’t be more inviting.
And yet, something is off in the picture-perfect village.
The friendliness borders on intrusive. Joan can’t shake the feeling that every move she makes is being tracked. An archaic organization still seems to hold the town in thrall. So does the sinister secret of a little boy who vanished decades ago. And unless Joan is imagining things, a frighteningly familiar figure from her past is on watch in the shadows.
Her fiancé tells her she’s being paranoid. He might be right. Then again, she might have moved to the deadliest small town on earth.
My name is Jess Lourey, and I write about secrets.
The story of my first published novel is both devastating and transformative, something I speak about in my TEDx Talk (https://youtu.be/a5vSLh3oPXI). I've come a long way since then. I'm proud to call myself a bestselling, twice Edgar-nominated, and twice Goodreads Readers Choice Awards shortlisted author who has won the ITW Thriller, Minnesota Book, and Anthony Awards. I write crime fiction, young adult, nonfiction, children's books, and book club fiction.
I've reached over a million readers since 2020. I'm also a former writing and sociology professor who still loves to teach transformative creative writing workshops built around my Rewrite Your Life method.
I live in Minneapolis with a rotating batch of foster kittens (and occasional foster puppies, but man those goobers are a lot of work). Pop on over to Lourey's Literati, my VIP Reader group on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/groups/38538...) and/or sign up for my molasses newsletter (https://jessicalourey.com/newsletter) for the latest news, giveaways, and insider information.
The Stepford Wives and Rosemary's Baby get mixed in with Leave to Beaver channeling The Twilight Zone. I approached this story with excitement because I enjoyed Lourey's Unspeakable Things so very much. I did like the idea of this story but the main character, Joan Harken, torpedoes it for me.
The year is 1968 and after Joan's mother's death, meeting the love of her life, getting pregnant, and being mugged, all in quick succession, Joan and her fiancé move to Deck's hometown of Lilydale. A house is waiting for them, among the houses of the leaders of the town and Joan feels the claustrophobia and pressure of having all eyes on her, having these town leaders acting as if her baby belongs to them. I love the atmosphere, the description of the people, town, homes, food, and the creepy feeling of never being alone, of always being watched, of something being very wrong with this town.
But Joan is an unreliable narrator with fuzzy memories and a penchant for shoplifting. Even Joan's best friend doesn't really trust Joan. At first I wasn't at all impressed with Joan's friend from her college days but by the end of the story I couldn't blame her for being frustrated with Joan, because I was also frustrated with her. There are only so many bad decisions and risks that a main character can take before I'm ready to throw in the towel and just give up on her. I slept on this review, not wanting to give it just 3 stars but woke up knowing that I didn't feel right rating it higher. And Joan...it's all your fault!
Yessssssssss! I found a winner after my last terrible waltzes with so many thrillers ended up with disappointment and frustration!
This is smart! This is batshit crazy! This is exciting!
This is my favorite kind of nail biter, eyes popper, jaw dropper, soul shaker, blood freezer thriller! I loved it! I loved it! I loved it! Full definition: Rosemary’s Baby meets Wayward Pines, Stepford Wives with Handmaid’s Tale vines!
It’s riveting, surprising and deliciously twisty! Most of them are not foreseeable! Especially the last third of the book is crazy wild ride!
Joan Harken is a young reporter in her mid-twenties, shaken by the loss of her mother but her life suddenly changes after the funeral: first of all, she finds her dreamy man Dex and she gets pregnant. As she starts thinking how she will adjust in her new life as a new mother but a serious of events including the promotion she expected is given to another colleague and getting mugged and stabbed at the back street, pushing her out of Minneapolis when she accepts Dex’s offer to move to Lillydale- a small town where he was born and raised. A town with motto: “Come Home Forever” and the people of the town welcome her with open hands, hugs, lots of kisses!
Everybody is too friendly, interested in her and her baby! Of course Joan is having hard time because throughout her life with her mother, she always lived in the shadows, laying low, having a secludedly lonely and friendless life! But now her future parents in law and entire town community watch like hawks, stalking her each step, talk or her misdemeanors just like disturbing spies who never sleep!
We understand that something happened Joan’s baby at the first chapters and we realize she is being kept in somewhere without her consent. But the events dragged her to that room are really eerie, creepy and way too much batshit crazy!
So keep reading the adventures of cuckoonest town and its lunatic and terrifying community! It’s kind of unputdownable, heart pounding, entertaining adventure!
I’m giving five cult-ish, master race, crazy townies, mid fifties, WTH I just read stars! This is definitely a great hit I highly recommend!
The year is 1968, and Joan is a journalist. After a terrifying mugging incident, she agrees with her boyfriend, Deck (the father of her unborn child), to move back to his hometown of Lilydale, Minnesota.
The town is like nothing she has ever seen. Everyone is so friendly, so interested in what she is doing at all times, so sinister. So perfect...TOO perfect.
Joan gets a job at the Lilydale Gazette after hearing a story about a young boy going missing from the community over 20 years ago. As she investigates the story while simultaneously getting to know more about the residents who live on her street, it soon becomes clear that there are secrets this “charming” small town is keeping...secrets that could be deadly if anyone tried to reveal them.
The timeline immediately hooked me. For those who may not know, I absolutely LOVE mysteries that take place in the era before internet, cell phones, GPS, etc. Author Jess Lourey does a phenomenal job of creating that time in ones mind. I also felt genuine suspense and unease as the story progressed. I gobbled everything up until the end.
However, I suspected the direction the story was going in, and it’s a direction I don’t particularly enjoy in my reading. My intrigue ended at about 70-80%, but I will say that this is a book where the epilogue makes up for some of it.
3.5 stars. Right on the dot. Since it’s the giving season, and I enjoyed it for the most part, I will round up (but I am very conflicted, and may round down at some point...I just don’t know at the moment).
3.5 ⭐️ Rounded up for this entertaining tale from the PSYCHOLOGICAL HORROR GENRE
As the book opens, the nation was in Chaos.
In DC, marines guarded the Capitol steps with machine guns while buildings were being torched. Festering tension fueled by black poverty and racism exploded to the surface.
No, it isn’t sometime in late 2020, or Jan. 6, 2021. ( It was just weird timing for my read of THIS book)
The year was 1968.
Dr. Martin Luther King had just been murdered in Memphis, where he had traveled to march peacefully. The unrest had spread to Baltimore, Cincinnati and Chicago’s west side.
And, Joanie had just lost a promotion and been mugged when her boyfriend, Deck, suggested that they leave Minneapolis and move to his idyllic, hometown of Lilydale, Minnesota.
CREEPY, huh?
At first, everything seems picture perfect.
Mr and Mrs. Ronald Schmidt are waiting outside, Joan and Deck’s new home. They rush forward with hugs to welcome their new daughter, a Corning Ware dish with a hot casserole has been prepared for dinner, and the neighbors will arrive with more of the same for days to come.
But, then Deck begins to resemble his father, more and more (picture those hysterical Progressive Insurance commercials 😂) and suddenly her life resembles the movie, Rosemary’s baby!
I loved the references....the locket, the Pixie haircut, the lemon yellow room, and the chocolate pudding.
But, don’t worry, there are differences, as this story was inspired in part by a TRUE story-that of six year old, Victor John “Jackie” Theel of Paynesville, Minnesota, who wore a blue sailor suit for his first day of Kindergarten in 1944, and was never seen again.
There was something strange about that community, and when a similar incident occurred there AGAIN in 2016, the mystery surrounding THAT tale inspired THIS one.
I rewatched the 1968 Roman Polanski film, of Rosemary’s baby, right before reading this book because I love to spot the references when I know a new book is paying homage to a Classic.
This story may be even more OTT than that one, and the voice may not be exactly right (comparing with the movie)
BUT, if you enjoy reading horror on occasion, you might have some fun with this one! 👶🍼 I was never bored!
It's a very quick read and though it's set in the late-sixties, the dialogue felt modern. I really enjoyed Joan - her thoughts were fun and quirky. I loved the occasional references to her "modern" avocado kitchen appliances, and her "racy" Mia Farrow pixie cut.
Though I had an inkling of where the story was going, and was ultimately proven mostly correct, it was gripping. There was most certainly an essence of Rosemary's Baby, with maybe a side of Peyton Place thrown in.
At first I was going to rate this book 3.5 stars. Though I really enjoyed the writing, characters, and plot, it seemed so highly implausible. Then I remembered...this was set in 1968, years before the internet, iPhones, laptops, and other means of easily accessing information. Suddenly, the concept seemed so much more fathomable. Recommended!
4 genetically disturbing stars! Available January 1, 2021.
Thank you to NetGalley and Thomas & Mercer for my review copy.
Joan Harken may get to have it all. A fulfilling job, a doting fiancé with a baby on the way and finally: a stable home and community for her young family to grow into, something she was deprived of in her own childhood. After a terrifying run-in while living in Minneapolis, Joan and her current partner, Deck, decide to move back to his hometown Lilydale. It’s promised to be a perfectly safe town, a place where nothing bad happens—until it does.
Not long after moving in Joan begins to notice things seem a little....off in Lilydale. There’s a strange hierarchy among the residents she just can’t figure out, and she increasingly feels like she’s living inside of the world’s most claustrophobic fishbowl. As she tries to make an impression in her new job at the local newspaper, Joan begins looking into the disappearance of a young boy who vanished decades prior without a trace. Pulling at this thread starts to unravel generations of secrets and mysteries that have been hidden away. And now that Joan is in Lilydale, pregnant with Deck’s child, will she be able to untangle herself before it’s too late?
I was excited to continue my search for the Great 2021 Thriller with Bloodline, which I received as a participant in January’s Mystery Book Club and Scared Suspense Book Club cross-over this month! And it isn’t just my first book by Jess Lourey, author of Unspeakable Things, which was a huge bestseller last year, but I’m also pretty sure this is the first one I’ve read from Amazon’s in-house publisher Thomas & Mercer. Despite how I feel about Amazon as a company, I appreciate that it can be a tool for authors to make their work more accessible to a wider audience, outside of the traditional ‘Big Five’ publishing houses.
I really liked this book, though I don’t think it will top any of my lists this year. The writing is easy to get sucked into, and I wouldn’t be surprised if a lot of people were able to finish it in one sitting. Lourey has worked so many twists into such a quick read that even if you guess a few of them, it would be difficult not to still be surprised. I’ll also say that this book had me yelling quite a bit, not unlike the way you’d yell at a character in a horror movie keeps GOING BACK INTO THE HOUSE DON’T DO THAT OMG YOU WILL BE MURDERED YOU *IDIOT*!!!!!!
There’s a lot of psychological warfare, where you’re not sure who Joan can trust. Her decisions, while understandable, can be frustrating, but a lot of that is due to the constraints of being a woman in the time period she’s living through. Outside of the general sexism you may come to expect during the Mad Men era, there were numerous restrictions and legal hurdles in place to keep women from obtaining independence. They couldn’t open their own bank accounts or credit cards, they couldn’t make reproductive decisions without their husband’s permission, they were flat-out barred from pursuing educational and career opportunities, so the ‘wHy DiDn’T sHe JuSt LeAvE’ criticisms seem pretty inane to me.
But if you’re in the market for a taught and twisting thriller, especially one that can pull you out of a reading slump, I’d still definitely recommend Bloodline. And Hollywood, if you’re listening, I think this would make for some great tv!
*Thanks again to Dennis, Chelsea, Carrie & Jordan for including me this month and to Jess Lourey for sending a copy of her book!
EXCERPT: I'm sitting on one leg as I grip Deck's hand, perched in the Chevelle's passenger seat, hurtling toward my new home, a place I've never been. My cat is curled on my lap, and with my free hand I'm caressing the itchy stab wounds through my pantyhose. Leftovers from the mugging. They're angry red scabs, halfway to healed. They hadn't been deep, and if not for them, and for Deck's reaction, the mugging would have already faded into the shadows of my mind. Why dwell on what you can't change?
Deck'd been shocked, though, horrified, swore that strangers didn't assault women in his hometown. Lilydale was peaceful, friendly. Everyone knew everyone, looked out for one another. The world outside might scream and swirl like a tornado, but Lilydale floated in a bubble, outside of time, as safe as a smile. The town even had a newspaper, Deck said. The Lilydale Gazette . I might finally get my byline.
It wasn't just the byline. After a childhood of moving from one city to another, the idea of settling down with Deck, of belonging, well it suddenly sounded all right.
ABOUT 'BLOODLINE': In a tale inspired by real events, pregnant journalist Joan Harken is cautiously excited to follow her fiancé back to his Minnesota hometown. After spending a childhood on the move and chasing the screams and swirls of news-rich city life, she’s eager to settle down. Lilydale’s motto, “Come Home Forever,” couldn’t be more inviting.
And yet, something is off in the picture-perfect village.
The friendliness borders on intrusive. Joan can’t shake the feeling that every move she makes is being tracked. An archaic organization still seems to hold the town in thrall. So does the sinister secret of a little boy who vanished decades ago. And unless Joan is imagining things, a frighteningly familiar figure from her past is on watch in the shadows.
Her fiancé tells her she’s being paranoid. He might be right. Then again, she might have moved to the deadliest small town on earth.
MY THOUGHTS: Stepford Wives meets Rosemary's Baby. Bloodline is even set in the same year, 1968, that Rosemary's Baby was released. But despite a blending that ought to have been full of menace and suspense, I felt not even the inkling of a chill, not one single goosebump. And this is a story that deserves to have that effect on its readers.
The plot has all the right ingredients. A picture perfect town with incredibly 'nice', if somewhat nosy, residents. A twenty year old missing child mystery. Joan's constant feeling of being watched. The fact that people know so much about her that she hasn't told them, including what she has been doing. The townsfolk referring to her baby as 'their' baby. And another missing child. This should have been downright creepy. But it just wasn't. It was all a little pedestrian and predictable.
If you are not familiar with Stepford Wives or Rosemary's Baby, this might well work for you.
And what's with Joan's boyfriend's name? Deck? Really?
⭐⭐.9
#Bloodline #NetGalley
THE AUTHOR: Jess Lourey lives in Minneapolis with her family and foster cats (and occasional foster puppies, but man those goobers are a lot of work). She writes about secrets, and is the author of nonfiction, YA adventure, magical realism, and crime fiction.
DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Thomas and Mercer, via Netgalley, for providing a digital ARC of Bloodline by Jess Lourey for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.
For an explanation of my rating system please refer to my Goodreads.com profile page or the about page on sandysbookaday.wordpress.com
Mill Street, Lilydale welcomes Joan Harken and fiancé Deck with open arms. Joan is anxious to fit in with Deck’s family and friends as she had a childhood spent on the move. It soon becomes obvious Lilydale is not the place Joan hopes it will be.
The timeframe for this novel is really good in 1968 with the Vietnam War and the draft in the background, MLK and Bobby Kennedy’s assassinations and the men being firmly in charge - well, certainly in this town which feels very old fashioned and sexist. The storyline and plot are good and keep you invested until the end. It’s like a cross between Rosemary’s Baby (several nods to that) and Stepford Wives and the chilling claustrophobia of being watched constantly freezes your blood. It’s clear there is a group controlling everything in the town and Joan finds the atmosphere stifling. She’s a determined character and her attempts the get the truth at the wicked heart of Lilydale are brave and smart as she exercises all her ingenuity. However, at times her behaviour doesn’t always make sense as she fails to confront Deck about the ways she is being kept in line. Maybe she realises the pointlessness and that she can’t win. The novel unfolds chillingly well with menace, tension and suspense until the twisted and explosive end. I dare say the plot line is far fetched but not beyond belief when you examine the crazy things that people have done/do!
BLOODLINE by Jess Lourey is a psychological thriller that grabbed me from the beginning and didn’t let go. Her excellent writing and exquisite story line captured my attention immediately. The author’s note tells the story that inspired this novel.
When a pregnant Joan Harken is mugged on her way home, she agrees to move to from Minneapolis to her fiancé’s small hometown two and a half hours northwest. Deck Schmidt tells her Lilydale is peaceful, friendly, and everyone knows everyone and looks out for each other. His parents have even gifted them their old house and Deck tells her he is sure the local newspaper will hire her as a journalist and she will get a coveted byline. What could possibly go wrong? Is it too good to be true? Something seems off. Is Joan being watched or is she being paranoid? Can she trust her instincts? Is there anyone she can trust?
This novel takes place in 1968 and 1969 and there is some jumping back and forth in time. As the time shifted forward, I continued to wonder what happened in the intervening months that landed her in the situation she is in in the future. While it would have helped if the transitions had been labeled with dates, a picture is gradually revealed to the reader.
Recognizing that this novel is set in the late 1960’s and not current times, I can see why Joan handled some things the way that she did. This was a time before the internet and cell phones. The story would not have worked for me if it was a contemporary setting so the author selected an appropriate timeline. Joan was someone that I wanted to be safe and happy and to have a healthy baby. But she also has some flaws that emerge during the course of the books that makes her more believable. Almost none of the other characters were likeable.
The writing is very atmospheric and creepy; the plot tense and suspenseful, with a few twists and a dramatic ending. Several themes are woven into the book, but I don’t want to give away any spoilers. Suffice it to say that family relationships and town dynamics play a large role in the story.
Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed this novel. It was an entertaining book that was emotionally intense at times. If you are a fan of psychological thrillers and family dramas, then you may want to check out this book. I am looking forward to reading more books by this author.
Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own and are not biased in any way. Publication date is currently set for January 1, 2021. This review was originally posted at Mystery and Suspense Magazine.
This was an interesting and surprising 1960’s thriller that had some really cool characters! It will be tough for me to say too much without spoilers, but here are a few general tidbits… Joan moves to her fiancé’s hometown in rural Minnesota after a mugging in Minneapolis leaves her spooked. She’s a bit put off at first by small town life and still reeling from the recent loss of her own mother. As she’s expecting a baby soon, she’s determined to adjust.
This book was inspired by an actual historical event, a disappearance of a young boy some twenty years before on his first day of Kindergarten. And Joan worries she may still be in danger…
This started off gradually, so that I wasn’t quite sure what sort of story it might be, but by the end I couldn’t flip pages fast enough. Amazingly done and I didn’t expect where it eventually led!
Bloodline by Jess Lourey is one of the creepiest books I have read in a very long time and I loved every word of it. Rosemary’s Baby is a prime example of what I consider creepy. Joan Harken, a journalist, leaves the big city for a move with her boyfriend to his Minnesota childhood home in the country. Lilydale is like a picture postcard and is everyone’s dream of life in a small town. But not all is as it seems and Joan soon notices that someone is always watching her. The friendly neighbours are overly-friendly and claustrophobia creeps into Joan’s life. There is something definitely wrong with this place and the journalist in her wants to find out what is going on. Why is everyone so interested in her? I cannot provide more information without spoiling the book for those who have not yet read Bloodline. The fact that this novel is based on real events makes the reader even more invested in the story. And you will not believe the conclusion! Highly recommended for any mystery reader who doesn’t mind a little fear and tension. Thank you to Thomas & Mercer, NetGalley and the author for the e-ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Remember Dean Koontz's earlier novels from the 1970's and 80's? Or John Saul's, The God Project? Well, Bloodline felt like it was written in that time period, but set in the 1960's. It was all a bit dated. I liked it but I think it's one I would've really loved back in my late teens/early twenties.
1968 – Reporter Joan Harkin has always been a city girl. But when she is mugged at knifepoint it's the final straw. Her fiancé Deck has been trying to convince her to move to his hometown ever since she found out she was pregnant, and wanting a safer life for her baby she agrees to up sticks and move to the country.
At first Lilydale seems like something out of a fairy tale, a storybook place, but Lily soon starts to feel suffocated living in Deck's childhood home, a stone's throw away from her in-laws to be. And the rest of the neighbour’s in Mill Lane seem a bit too friendly and helpful, and far too interested in her pregnancy.
Joan's uneasiness increases when she discovers a child, Paulie Aandeg, went missing on his first day of Kindergarten in 1944. She becomes fixated on the cold case, and the deeper she digs, but more her fears grow for her unborn child.
As I said I enjoyed Bloodline well enough, but the writing and plot did feel a bit old-fashioned, and not because it was set in the 1960’s. But there was a lot I liked - the opening chapter was extremely disturbing, bordering on horror, and there’s no way I could've stopped reading after that. I enjoyed the eerie vibe throughout as I tried to figure out whether Joan was being driven crazy or whether she was imagining or overreacting. The big twist was a complete surprise, as well as what followed and I had no inkling in regards to any of it. This fictions novel drew inspiration from the real disappearance in 1944 of Kindergartener, Victor John “Jackie" Theel from small-town Minnesota, and the author wove it into her own plot in clever and unique ways.
I know it was set in 1968 where a women's place is in the home, and sexism and misogyny were common place, but considering Joan was portrayed as such an independent career woman I felt she should have confronted her husband and stood up for herself more, especially initially when she began to suspect that life in Lilydale wasn't all it cracked up to be. A lot of her behaviour came across as weak-willed, inconsistent, and sometimes downright strange.
The references to Rosemary's Baby went completely over my head as I am long overdue for a re-watch. Thanks Jayme and DeAnn for enlightening me. An above-average, fast-paced, quick read but it didn't make any where near as much of an impression on me as her previous novel, Unspeakable Things.
There’s something to be said for being surprised when you read a book! I went into this one completely blind and it was quite the ride!
Our main character, Joan Harken, is an aspiring journalist in Minneapolis. Finding herself pregnant and surviving a mugging, she agrees to move to her boyfriend’s small hometown in rural Minnesota. At first the town seems idyllic, but things are not all as they appear in Lilydale.
Soon we aren’t sure if Joan is paranoid or if people really are watching her. A sinister air permeates the town and I really wasn’t sure how this one would end up! I liked the nod to "Rosemary's Baby" but that movie creeped me out too much to watch again (kudos to you Jayme!). Joan feels like the whole town is against her and I rooted for her to find some way to escape!!
I should know better than to pick up a new Jess Lourey book, thinking I’ll just peek at the first few pages and get then back to the book I was reading. Six hours later, it’s three in the morning and I’m racing through the last few chapters, unable to sleep until I know how it all ends. Set in an idyllic small town rooted in family history and horrific secrets, Bloodline is Pleasantville meets Rosemary’s Baby. A deeply unsettling, darkly unnerving, and utterly compelling novel, this book chilled me to the core, and I loved every bit of it.
You've read it all before. The naive woman, brought to a new and idyllic town, full of hope for the future. Slowly she realizes that something is "off" in the new community. It's a little too perfect - on the surface, anyway. Whether it is The Stepford Wives, The Night Strangers or now, Bloodline, you've read it before, written better, and you don't need to read it again.
Imagine a small, picture perfect town in the 1960s with a close nit community where nothing bad ever happens…allegedly. I was pleasantly surprised to discover that Bloodline takes place around St. Cloud, Minnesota which isn’t too far from where I live. The main character, Joan, needs a new start with her fiancé after unfortunate circumstances keep happening to her.
They decide to move to Lilydale, which is the hometown of her fiancé for a pregnant Joan to have her baby. Like a colorful Band-Aid covering a festering wound, our main character pulls of the picture-perfect facade of the town to discover dark secrets that the inhabitants go to great lengths to conceal including a child kidnapping that happened many years ago. Maybe.
Joan is not always the most reliable narrator as she tends to omit things from her own memories such as a friend’s suicide and replace them with more pleasant ones. She also has knack for stealing little trinkets that she picked up in her childhood to help her cope with stressful situations. At first, it was a bit annoying as it felt like she was ruining things for herself, but I eventually came around to cheering her on when her eye catches hold of something you just know she shouldn’t pilfer.
She was a strong fighter and well written character though. I felt her helplessness through the pages especially since she cared so much about others even at her own expense. I would have just driven away from the town earlier if I went through everything she had to experience. For real though, I would leave far, far away, especially since the community keeps too close of an eye on any dissidents making it too stressful by far.
I enjoyed how the author described scenes through all five senses which made it easier to imagine. The prose was fun with how you would have separate small chapters taking place in the present of her waking up in a room. Her memories she forgot were slowly returning to her creating tension in the air that could be cut with a knife. The story felt like it was occurring in the 1960s as well with little events and news articles floating around further enhancing the feel of the era.
The mystery and twists behind the town were engaging where I kept trying to figure out what were red herrings and what weren’t. I kind of surmised the background of the town (truthfully, I’m giving myself too much credit here) and some mysteries, but there were enough twists and mysteries that surprised me all the same.
I really enjoyed this book even if some of the ideas behind the book have been done before. The author, Jess Lourey, bases a lot of her stories in rural Minnesota where some locations might be familiar to some of our patrons. Another interesting thing about this book and the author is that each one of her books is based on a true crime that happened locally. I’m glad this is only the first book that I read by Jess Lourey since that means I have more to look forward to reading.
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I’m not sure what box you would put this book in. I didn’t think it was, strictly speaking, horror - but it certainly had a creepy vibe. It’s 1968 and 28 year old Joan Harken is working as a ‘soft’ journalist on a Minneapolis paper when, in short order, she misses out on a promotion, her mother dies, she gets mugged in the street, and injured, and she learns she is pregnant. So when boyfriend Deck suggests a move to his hometown of Lilydale, a few hours drive away, she thinks - why not? Deck says it’s a wonderful, idyllic little town where everyone is looked after. It sounds too good to be true, right?
Oh gosh, when they arrive Deck’s parents are standing there like some kind of welcoming committee. And Joan and Deck are to live in his childhood home 😮. The neighbours all come over with casserole dishes and everyone is just so nice! Hmm. Nevertheless, Joan does her best to fit in. And everyone is sooo nice. It soon starts to feel a little stultifying. Every time Joan is out and about her neighbours from Mill Street seem to there too. And they always seem to know where she’s been and who she has been talking to. It was all a bit Stepford Wives.
She gets a small reporting gig with the local paper and takes an interest in the 1944 disappearance of 6 year old Paulie Aandeg. Then - surprise, Paulie tuns up as a 30 year old, claiming he had recovered some repressed memories of his childhood in Lilydale. Joan is to cover this story for the paper. But everywhere she turns roadblocks are put in her place. By now the air is a little thick with menace. The atmosphere is claustrophobic and it is clear that all is not hunky dory in Lilydale. There is something rotten in the core.
I really enjoyed the story. It was quite disturbing. None of the characters, even Joan, were particularly likeable although I did feel sorry for Joan as she feared for her life and that of her unborn child and wondered about her sanity. She was an unreliable narrator in that, as the reader, I was wondering about her sanity too! Other than Joan the characters were very cardboard cutout. I think that was deliberate I think they were meant fo appear robotic to keep you wondering. And it worked. The twist came out of nowhere so kudos for that little surprise! The book wasn’t perfect but I’m so glad I finally got a bit creeped out. Many books have promised but very few deliver. I will have to read Unspeakable Things now .
Joan has had enough of the city. After being mugged, she agrees to move with her boyfriend to his home town to finish her pregnancy and begin life as a family.
At first glance, the town of Lilydale is about as perfect as the name but there are cracks in the veneer. Joan doesn’t feel like she fits in with the watchful residents creating a stifling atmosphere. If she feels like everyone is in her business, it’s because they are!
The sixties time period coordinated appropriately with the plotline. The opposite of freelove and Woodstock, the regressive attitudes of women remaining in their place reign supreme here.
The divide between a progressive and independent woman and that of being expected to conform was effectively portrayed as Joan struggles to reconcile her desire for a career as a reporter with her own byline and the expectations of being a mother.
Adding to the weirdness was Joan’s unreliability as a narrator. I wasn’t sure what to think, but I was on board with Joan coming out on top.
I enjoyed the author’s writing and will look for her other books.
I eagerly awaited the release of this book. I was thrilled to find it as a First Reads this month! I didn't even glance at the other selections or read the reviews on this book before I made my choice and tore into reading.
About a quarter way into the book I was questioning my ability to understand what was going on. At almost halfway I went back and checked the reviews others had written. I wasn't surprised at the bad reviews at all. In fact, now that I made myself finish the book, I think the reviews were way too kind.
Hopefully I won't let loose any spoilers. But if it causes readers to not waste time with this silly story, maybe I've actually done some people a favor.
Jess Lourey is one of my favorite authors! I haven't read much of her Murder by Month series as they just aren't my kind of reading. But I've absolutely loved her other books. Catalan Book of Secrets is one of my very favorite books overall! A tie for #1 favorite! I also loved "Unspeakable Things", one of the best written books ever! I've taken some of the author's writing classes as well.
I have no idea what happened with this one! Its not even a case of not as good a plot, or not a great story idea. The actual writing sucks! There is no character development, so nothing the main character does makes any sense! The supporting characters don't feel real, either. The plot is amateur and has more holes than filler; it is full of unnecessary actions.
No character in the book stays true to their...well, character. Her best friend turns on her for no apparent reason. For her actions to be believable, the scene needed some buildup. The story about her other friend's suicide did not justify her friend disbelieving her, not at all. This lack of character development made the suicide seem like very random, unnecessary information.
Then later in the book, this disloyal friend shows up in public while the main character is still pregnant. Said friend shouts sensitive information across a parking lot, telling our main girl she is in danger-- but she doesn't try to rescue her. ??? It was never explained why our girl didn't just leave with her friend right then to save herself and her unborn baby. We can guess she wanted to destroy the evil...but putting her baby in jeopardy by being born there was an unrealistic price to be willing to pay if she failed.
I almost abandoned the book 65% of the way through. I was dizzy from rolling my eyes so hard. It was like a never before self publisher's first effort at trying to write, I kid you not! Also, it seemed like I had read parts of it before...?? Maybe some of the characters and scenes were recycled from her other books? I'm not sure, maybe it was too predictable, because I found myself knowing what was going to happen at certain points.
I can't believe this book was written by Jess Lourey. J L is a pro. Whoever penned this book was not! I spent more time making Kindle notes about how ridiculous it was, and pointing out holes in the story, than I did actually reading the book.
I don't know what happened here. The book is a real stinker, and I am sad I must say that about a book by this (usually) magnificent author. I'm hoping it's an off year for her and not a total lapse.
Disappointed. And sorry have to write such a review in the spirit of being truthful.
Bloodline by Jess Lourey is a new version of Rosemary's baby it's absolutely unnerving, chilling and TWISTED which also screams CULT. Once again Jess Lourey has weaved in an old true crime story and mixed it brilliantly with the fiction. If perfect neighbors, perfect town, everyone knowing your business and missing children is your kind of book then I definitely recommend this. Just be careful the ending equals crazy town 📖
Now THIS is how you do a thriller 👏🏼 This book hooked me right from the beginning and I truly couldn’t put it down. I was so invested in the story and I thoroughly enjoyed how subtly creepy this book was paired with a climactic and horrifying ending. There were so many twists I didn’t see coming and it was a LOT darker than I was expecting 😳 This is one of the best thrillers I’ve read in a long time and it was absolute perfection in my eyes! Bloodline is out now so definitely pick this one up ASAP if you haven’t already 🙌🏼
CW: abortion, kidnapping, mentions of animal death + rape
{Thank you so much to the author and publisher for the gifted copy}
What's the big deal about New Years? I drop the ball all the time! 😁 You know who didn't drop the ball? Jess Lourey, that's who! Y'all probably remember me raving over Unspeakable Things. It was my first read of 2020 and crazy enough, Bloodline is my last. Lourey, you've sandwiched all my reads this year and I wouldn't have it any other way! A creepy, suspenseful novel based on true events? Um, ALL THE YES PLEASE. We are delivered a paranoid atmosphere of a small town that is focused singularly on our protagonist, Joan . The eerie feeling that came across felt like a mix of The Truman Show meets Get Out meets Rosemary's Baby meets The Stepford Wives. Where everyone seems to be in on something. Where they know your every move and veer you in the "right" direction. Act properly and get rewarded. Don't act properly... well, do you really want to go there?
Uff the men in this book. I try to remember the time period in which this was written but still. UFF THE FUCKING MEN IN THIS BOOK. I wanted to scream on every woman's behalf. But I also wanted to drop kick or glove slap most of these women too so... 🤷 One character I did love? Regina! She is a fun character and I loved her banter with Joan. I truly loved the atmosphere of this. You feel more and more claustrophobic as the pages turn.. and whatever it was I was expecting, it wasn't THAT. Brilliant. Lourey has solidified a spot in my top authors list.
A word I haven't seen in a while - kerfuffle - I couldn't stop saying it after I read it Kerfuffle. KERFUFFLE. Try it, it's fun. 😉
I would highly recommend this and Unspeakable Things. If you haven't read either yet - chop chop - get on it!
Bloodline by Jess Lourey is a cross genre thrill ride that will you leave gasping for air at the end.
Based in part on actual events, Joan Harken finds herself pregnant and living in a the small town in which her boyfriend was raised. Lilydale, MN seems too good to be true: a welcoming committee with food greeting them, a home already waiting for them to move into, and no crime at all.... except that one incident of a missing child 20 years ago. Other than that incident it's all just so perfect. So why does Joan feel as though everything is wrong, off kilter and ominous? What secrets are the perfect people of Lilydale hiding?
Bloodline kept me on the edge of my seat reading as quickly as I possibly could to find out the truth. The characters are so inspired, the writing is absolute perfection, Bloodline is a book that you will not want to miss as this year comes to an end.
Many people seemed to like this book, I thought it would be good since it was among the books nominated for a Goodreads award. I did not like the book, the story was laughable with paper-thin characters. Avoid, pick something else if you want to be entertained.
Well hello Jess Lourey, how is Bloodline my first book by you?! This is the question I have been asking myself because WOW. I had an ecopy but when I saw it was a KU title and I could get the audio for $1.99, that's just what I did, and it was totally worth it. Whitney Dykhouse narrates Bloodline and I LOVED her as Joan. I was completely addicted to the audiobook and I would highly recommend it.
I am from Minnesota but haven't spent any time in Lilydale, and frankly after reading this book I'm not sure I want to. Especially considering this book was inspired by a real case there. I have read my fair share of thrillers, and this book is what I would call the cream of the crop. It was unique, suspenseful, and above all, incredibly creepy. Once I started it I knew I was going to have a hard time putting it down and that was definitely the case. I just wanted to know where it was going and didn't want to stop until I got there. I was completely chilled by Bloodline, and the end was something I never saw coming. I say go into it as blind as you can because that is the best way. I see you Lourey, and I can't wait until your next book comes out!
Thank you to the publisher for my advance review copy via NetGalley. All opinions and thoughts are my own.
BLOODLINE is an interesting read. It’s supposedly based on a true story but also injects a bit of horror and mystery (although I personally didn’t find this a horror novel). Did I like it? I did. Much more towards the end than the beginning. However, it DID feel like a rip-off of Rosemary’s Baby. I read Rosemary’s Baby a few years ago and enjoyed it immensely. One would think that if I loved that book then this would be a total winner for me. Unfortunately, that wasn’t the case and there were way too many similarities for me to fully enjoy Lourey’s take on it. Not only that, seeing as this one is based on a true story I went ahead and did a little research about the kidnapped boy in the sailor costume. Had the author focused MORE on this disappearance for which the story was based on then I think I would have enjoyed it a lot more. For me, it feels like she veered way too far off of THAT case and went with something fictitious which didn’t work. Had these two stories been told in their own books I would have probably liked them. This mashup was just too weird.
Fans of crime/kidnapping fiction with a bit of cult like scenarios will more than likely enjoy Lourey’s latest release, Bloodline. While it wasn’t a favorite of mine I do appreciate the way the author writes the story in a historical perspective.
I picked up Bloodline owing to the fantastic reviews it received so far! The creepy cover also played a part in that decision. Bloodline by Jess Lourey starts with a dark & creepy chapter that hooks you right in. While reading I found myself wondering if this book would go in the direction that many books before have gone. It didn't and I'm so so glad about that. I'm tired of reading about naive pregnant women racing towards something that is disconcerting. Jess Lourey successfully builds a chilling & creepy atmosphere throughout the book; you will want to keep to turning those pages until the very end. I loved the character of Joan. She's smart & ambitious but no match for Lilydale's conniving townsfolk or is she? The ending of this book was super creepy but put together very well. I did not see the twist towards the end coming turning all my self-made theories on their heads. This book was inspired by real events so it made a compelling read for me.
Thank you, NetGalley, Thomas & Mercer & Jess Lourey for an arc!