When I heard the premise of this book, I immediately wanted to read it because there's something mesmerizing about boarding school mysteries.
Temple House is an elite catholic boarding school, where Louisa is admitted because she's a genius. She makes friends with Victoria very soon after she arrives, who's also very close to the charismatic art teacher of the school, Mr. Laville. Within a couple of months, she vanishes into thin air with Mr. Laville, and 25 years after, no one still knows what happened.
The story is told from 2 perspectives going back and forth between past and present. One narrator is Louisa herself, and the other is a journalist who's writing an article about the case.
I thought the novel had a very strong start, really beautiful descriptions & a very dark atmosphere setting. The tone was successfully set from the beginning and the author carried it well until the end. It was an easy, page-turner read that also created some tension for you to want to find out what happened all those years ago.
For these reasons, I think it's a good debut and I'd read more from Donohue in the future.
However, the book didn't leave me with a feeling of full satisfaction, mainly due to a lack of deep character development. Because all this mystery was set on these 3 characters, I think it was important to have a deeper understanding to feel closer to them. The language in this sense felt distant to the characters, which left me with a sense of dissatisfaction.
Although Mr. Laville was an important character, we almost didn't know anything about him. There was a lot of mention of the school, the church, how the nuns run the school, etc. But, we never got to see any examples of it, and never got to know any of those characters. We also didn't get to know the journalist, should be an important character if she's narrating half the story. Some things came out of nowhere, just happened. For example, Victoria decided to talk to this journalist after years, but why I wondered. What made her special? There are quite a bit of blank spaces I wish to be filled.
There was a lot of tell, but not show.
Personally, I saw the end coming from early on, but still kept reading and felt the tension rising through the end.
Overall, I think there's a lot of substance in this book as a debut, and I think Donohue's writing is beautiful.