This is my first Ruth Ware book and I plan to read more because of the good things I've read about her books. The Turn of the Key takes place in an old home, Heatherbrae House, that has been restored faithfully in parts of it while other parts have been gutted and transformed into the most modern of homes. The entire home has "smart home" features which seem to have been set to an overly intrusive level. Not only that, the features don't always work as intended or don't work at all, making the home seem like it's gone rogue. All this in a very remote setting in the Scottish Highlands.
Rowan Caine stumbles on an ad to hire a nanny for the four children that live in Heatherbrae House. The salary for the live in, full time position, is unbelievably generous and Rowan is more than ready to leave her job at a daycare center. Feeling the need to make sure she gets the job, Rowan's resume is less than truthful although she does have the basic requirements for the job. Once Rowan sees the house in person, she is determined to be sure she is the perfect fit for the family and the position. She gets the job and has to begin within a short time, arriving at the house the day before the parents leave for a week or two of work away from home.
From the beginning of the book we know that Rowan is writing to a lawyer to see if he will defend her murder case. The book is actually a letter to that lawyer, a very long, book length letter, which felt clunky to me at first, until I just set aside that this woman was writing the longest letter I've ever read. Because Rowan is relating her version of what happened at the house, the events of story have already taken place. Rowan is not going to get to the point quickly, she's not going to make a long story short, in her telling, she's going to give her details of her thoughts and feelings throughout the events.
Once I got over the method of telling the story and faced that Rowan was going to take a long time in telling it, I began to enjoy the story more the farther we got into it. Even though Rowan really is a nanny, she is playing a role at Heatherbrae House of being a perfect nanny, rather than her usual quick to anger, quick to slap or grab, messy, sometimes unreliable self. Things at the house, with the house, begin to go lopsided quickly, with strange noises, doors and windows opened, closed, locked, unlocked with no explanation. Cameras are everywhere and the mother of the children will pop in on loudspeaker, from her far away location, to discuss things with Rowan, giving the atmosphere an even more eerie and intrusive feel.
Then there is the angry, belligerent eight year old, scared five year old, and the needy baby with a new nanny who is very ill suited for the job. Add in the fourteen year old, who comes home from boarding school, totally out of control and threatening to tell secrets about Rowan and things go downhill from there. A child dies and Rowan is blamed, thus her letter searching for a lawyer who is willing to believe her and help her.
I guessed what was happening at almost every turn but still, I wanted to know why it was happening and how it was happening and enjoyed learning those things. What I really liked was the very last letter that was written and the final reveal at the end of the book. Now I look forward to reading more Ruth Ware books.
Published August 6th 2019
Thank you to Gallery/Scout Press/Simon & Schuster and Edelweiss for this ARC.