"In order to truly understand something, you have to take it apart."
The above-statement is the maxim that drove the protagonists of this novel to form a group called the Compassionate Dismantlers, a sort hippy dippy "artistic" terrorist organization that the main characters founded ten years before the actual events of the book took place. (We get glimpses of the Compassionate Dismantlers, who they were and what they stood for, throughout the novel, through a collection of flashbacks, character reminiscences, and journal entries). The maxim is also a fairly fitting way to describe Dismantled, a book that is, perhaps, best appreciated by the reader willing to ignore the WHOLE, in favor of its more attractive and interesting parts.
The premise of the story, in and of itself, is one you've probably seen before, in other novels or films. There is an event in the past, that brings about the tragic and untimely death of one of the characters. Cut to the present, when "strange and mysterious" things begin happening to the other characters involved in the event, things that seemingly could only be perpetuated by someone who witnessed the event itself. This, of course, poses a not-entirely-new dilemma to the readers of Dismantled, as well as its protagonists: Is there someone out there who KNOWS what happened that fateful night, and is taunting the characters with that knowledge? Or are supernatural elements to blame?
On its surface, "Dismantled" looks like your typical "I Know What You Did Last Summer" meets "Hide and Seek" meets "The Sixth Sense" amalgamation. But there's a bit more to it than that. Where Dismantled succeeds most is in its plotting. McMahon clearly took her time mapping out this story, which is constantly turning everything you think you know about the characters on its head, and taking them in directions you probably wouldn't have guessed, no matter how many of these types of tales you have already read. If you are like me, after you have finished reading this story, you will find yourself constantly rerunning the various plotpoints of the novel in your head, "taking them apart," and examining them separately, to ascertain how each fits into the story's intricately complex structure.
Where Dismantled was a bit less successful for me was in its character development. I simply couldn't find anyone to root for in this story. There's the crass, and quite possibly sociopathic, Suz, who all the characters inexplicably seem to worship, despite her having no redeeming qualities whatsoever. You also have the severely disturbed Winnie, for whom a "good time" involves running around dressed up as her dead friend. Then there's the mopey, useless, and weak-willed Henry, and his estranged wife, the cold and acerbic Tess.
And don't even get me started on Tess' and Henry's child, Emma! I was at least hoping I'd be able to like the 9-year old in this story. But, alas, Emma take the Creepy Kid in a Horror Story chiche to entirely new levels of freakishness.
I suspect the lack of likeable characters in this novel might have been intentional on the part of the author. After all, if you don't trust any of the characters in a novel, any of them can be "guilty," right? And yet, it's always nice, when you are spending 400-pages with a group of characters, to have at least one, you don't continually want to toss in the lake. Beyond not being particularly likeable, I didn't find the characters in this story to be believable, either. Many of the characters' actions at various points in the novel seemed inconsistent with the people we thought they were in previous pages. At times, some of the choices the characters made in the course of the story were, at best, bizarre, and, at worst, flat-out inexplicable.
In summation, Dismantled is a riveting and intricately plotted mystery / possible ghost story. The author's unique take on a common premise will definitely keep you guessing and compulsively turning pages, until you reach the end. However, the story could have used a bit more "heart." Had the author traded in one or two shocking plot twists, for a bit more consistent character development, this pretty good story could have been a truly great one.