Search

Rainy Day's Books, Video Games and Other Writings

Tag

mystery thriller

Book Review: The Witch’s Orchard

Rating: 4 stars

A ninth generation Appalachian herself, Archer Sullivan brings the mountains of North Carolina to life in The Witch’s Orchard, a wonderfully atmospheric novel that introduces private investigator Annie Gore.

Former Air Force Special Investigator Annie Gore joined the military right after high school to escape the fraught homelife of her childhood. Now, she’s getting by as a private investigator and her latest case takes her to an Appalachian holler not unlike the one where she grew up.

Ten years ago, three little girls went missing from their tiny mountain town. While one was returned, the others were never seen again. After all this time without answers, the brother of one of the girls wants to hire an outsider, and he wants Annie. While she may not be from his town, she gets mountain towns. Mountain people. Driving back into the hills for a case this old—it might be a fool’s errand. But Annie needs to put money in the bank and she can’t turn down a case. Not even one that dredges up her own painful past.

In the shadow of the Blue Ridge, Annie begins to track the truth, navigating a decade’s worth of secrets, folklore of witches and crows, and a whole town that prefers to forget. But while the case may have been buried, echoes of the past linger. And Annie’s arrival stirs someone into action.

I received a digital copy of this book through the publisher on NetGalley for an honest review.

From start to finish, The Witch’s Orchard was a thrilling read that I couldn’t wait to read to its conclusion. With the setting taking place in a small mountain town in North Carolina, I felt like I could imagine what the inhabitants were like whenever Annie described them, as they all seemed like the typical people who would live in such a place. I also felt that I could imagine the terrain where this story takes place, and I was excited to find out where Annie’s investigation would lead me as a reader.

One of my favorite things about the story here was uncovering the mystery surrounding these young girls’ disappearances. There’s just something really exciting to me about reading books where people go missing through the investigator’s eyes to uncover who’s responsible and why. I think a lot of the excitement, to me, stems from trying to figure out who’s responsible, as the investigator is interviewing people and uncovering clues. And along with that, these disappearances happened in such a small town, which made it more interesting because there are only so many people who could’ve taken them. I found myself feeling like Annie and having a difficult time pinpointing who I thought had taken them.

What I also enjoyed about The Witch’s Orchard was the local story about the Quartz Creek Witch. During her investigation, Annie asked everyone in the town about this story, and each person’s account of it was different. And I loved that not everyone told her this story the same way, because I felt like it was just another mystery, along with finding out what happened to the girls who disappeared in this town. It also made you wonder if the person who took the girls felt a connection to the Quartz Creek Witch in that the person responsible felt like they were giving these girls a better life than the one they had.

If there’s anything with this book, I didn’t particularly enjoy it was the lack of character development and the ending. In this book, I wanted to learn more about Annie and her life. While The Witch’s Orchard does give you a sneak peek into her past before coming into this town, I felt like it gave me just barely enough to keep me hooked on the story. But I wanted to learn more, especially about her relationship with Leo, which gets hinted at throughout, and how she grew up, which also gets hinted at here. I also wanted to learn more about these characters in this small town she goes to, but I feel like with this book, we barely get to know them before the case is solved and she goes back home. That’s why I wasn’t particularly fond of the ending, too, because I wanted to see what happened with these characters now that Annie figured out who took the girls.

But overall, I enjoyed reading The Witch’s Orchard. It was a book with just enough mystery to keep me hooked and coming back for more. I also enjoyed the setting, taking place in a small mountain town in North Carolina, and the different local stories about the Quartz Creek Witch. The perfect read for anyone looking for a simple mystery to enjoy. The Witch’s Orchard was published on August 12, 2025, for anyone interested in giving this book a read.          

Book Review: Where He Can’t Find You

Rating: 4.5 stars

From USA Today bestselling horror/thriller author Darcy Coates comes the chilling legend of a monster no one can escape.

DON’T WALK ALONE, OR THE STITCHER WILL FIND YOU.

Abby Ward lives in a town haunted by disappearances. People vanish, and when they’re found, their bodies have been dismembered and sewn back together in unnatural ways. But is it the work of a human killer…or something far darker?

DON’T STAY OUT LATE, OR THE STITCHER WILL TAKE YOU.

She and her younger sister live by a strict set of rules designed to keep them safe―which is why it’s such a shock when Hope is taken. Desperate to get her back, Abby tells the police everything she knows, but they claim their hands are tied.

DON’T CLOSE YOUR EYES, OR THE STITCHER WILL REMAKE YOU.

With every hour precious, Abby and her friends are caught in a desperate game of cat and mouse. They have to get Hope back. Quickly. Before too much of her is cut away. And before everything they care about is swallowed up by the darkness waiting in the tunnels beneath the home they thought they knew.

From beginning to end, Where He Can’t Find You was a thrilling read that I couldn’t put down as I wanted to find out what happened next to the characters within its pages. It tells a very creepy story that I could easily see haunting many people’s dreams as I myself got goosebumps from reading it.

The story told in this book is very chilling and I enjoyed it. I enjoyed reading this book because of the abnormal things that would happen when one of the people who lived in this town disappeared. Whenever someone was taken by the Sticher, there were always signs and as a reader you get to see them in the story. And I loved it because I felt like it added another layer to this book. The amount of detail the characters go into making sure they don’t become one of the people who goes missing by establishing rules for themselves with regards to the Sticher was also an interesting tidbit in this book to see. 

I also enjoyed that the setting of this story takes place in a small mining town as that adds even more elements to the story. I feel like this especially added another layer to the plot in Where He Can’t Find You because the main characters in the story along with all the other inhabitants already had a sense of who was involved with these disappearances. You could see it from the way the characters in the story act when it comes to him from them immediately putting distance between themselves and him whenever he’s nearby to people in the town leaving him offerings outside his home in the hopes that it will stop them from becoming one of the people who goes missing.

What I especially enjoyed about reading this book was the detail put into telling this story. For example, when talking about events that happened in this town in the past, usually they encompassed a chapter and were from the perspective of the person relaying the event. And I found those chapters particularly enjoyable for me to read because I felt like along with getting more information about the Sticher, I felt like I was learning a little more too about the character who was talking about what happened. It was another layer of the story being told here that I found I appreciated as it gave me more knowledge about the small town these characters live in and what all they’ve had to do to survive in this town.

If I had to choose anything with Where He Can’t Find You I didn’t particularly enjoy it would have to be lack of character development with these characters. I feel like from the beginning to the end of this book, Abby, Hope and their friends don’t really go through any development here. The events that happen in this story just happen to them and I feel like these events could’ve easily happened to anyone else in the town as none of these characters’ personalities changed or anything when reading. A perfect example of what I mean by this pertains to the new girl who moves into their town, Jen. She has absolutely nothing to do with the events going on in the story other than her and her father moving to this town. Yet I feel like she takes it upon herself to get involved with the group of characters in the story that we interact with even though she truly has no reason to. Especially because up until a certain point in the story, she believes the other characters in the story are just trying to scare her because of her being new in town. She doesn’t believe any of the things going on in the book that the people in town tell her are real but then ends up helping Abby and the rest of her friends with helping get Hope back.   

I also feel like there’s a lack of explanation with certain things that happen in the story too. Even with all of the details as a reader I get about the Sticher, I feel like there are some things that weren’t fully explained. The best example that comes to mind for me is Abby and Hope’s mom in the book. While reading Where He Can’t Find You, she acts really unusually in the very beginning of the book, and there’s no real explanation for this given to us. I know it more than likely has to do with the disappearance of her husband and the strange things going on in the town, but it never gets fully explained from what I recall. And then in the end of the book, there’s a bit about her that we get where she basically starts to act normal again after what transpires with her children. And that’s basically all we get when it comes to her character in the story, which bothers me as I felt like we would actually get more from her as to why she acts the way she does in the beginning of the book.

As a whole though, I enjoyed reading Where He Can’t Find You. It was the perfect creepy book for me to read as I enjoyed the storytelling within its pages and felt like the setting of a small mining town was the perfect backdrop for the events in the story that transpired with these characters. Highly recommend for those who enjoy spooky books and that describes what happens story wise very well as you will not be disappointed with this one.    

Book Review: What Never Happened

Rating: 3 stars

Colette “Coco” Weber has relocated to her Catalina Island home, where, twenty years before, she was the sole survivor of a deadly home invasion. All Coco wants is to see her aunt Gwen, get as far away from her ex as possible, and get back to her craft—writing obituaries. Thankfully, her college best friend, Maddy, owns the local paper and has a job sure to keep Coco busy, considering the number of elderly folks who are dying on the island.

But as Coco learns more about these deaths, she quickly realizes that the circumstances surrounding them are remarkably similar…and not natural. Then Coco receives a sinister threat in the mail: her own obituary.

As Coco begins to draw connections between a serial killer’s crimes and her own family tragedy, she fears that the secrets on Catalina Island might be too deep to survive. Because whoever is watching her is hell-bent on finally putting her past to rest.

What makes What Never Happened an enjoyable read to me is the amount of mystery and suspense within its pages. Coco returns to a place she hasn’t been to since she was a teenager and lost everything. But the peaceful island where her aunt lives is still far from peaceful when the elderly start dying and Coco gets threatening messages, including her own obituary. I enjoyed these aspects of the story because they made me sympathize with her. But also made me invested in the story too as I wanted to know who was responsible for what happened to her family all those years ago and who was responsible for causing the deaths of these elderly people Coco was writing obituaries for. Seeing Coco be the person to investigate since nobody else was taking all these deaths seriously felt fitting due to her past and being a journalist so I was really interested to see how it would all unfold.

Another aspect of this book I enjoyed was the themes covered. Rachel Hall doesn’t hesitate when it comes to depicting all of the racism Coco experiences throughout her life. Especially when she returns to Catalina Island through the threatening messages she receives and how she gets treated when she tries to get help after receiving these threatening messages. Let’s also not forget how they tried to erase her family’s existence from ever being on this island to begin with by never really talking about their murders when they took place, which I found to be messed up. I also felt like I saw racism depicted too with regards to her friendship with her best friend Maddy who helped get her a job at the local paper on Catalina Island. Just with the way Maddy treated Coco throughout this book was terrible, from being the one to get the job working for the Times even though Coco was the better writer because her father knew someone there to taking all the credit for the story Coco wanted to write about the deaths of the elderly on the island and having Coco barely mentioned in the article. I felt like their whole friendship was Maddy being around Coco so that she could say she had a black friend, even though all she did was treat Coco terribly and take advantage of her. I know as a white person myself, I’ll never ever begin to understand all the struggles people of color go through, which is why I appreciate when reading books like this one because they allow me to get a glimpse of what it’s like to be a person of color. And I feel like the way racism is covered through what Coco experiences in What Never Happened is wonderfully done from the threats she receives once there to her terrible friendship with Maddy.

Another theme covered that I saw and appreciated was trauma and anxiety. I felt like I saw a lot of this especially with Coco’s character once she gets back onto the island. As the reader, I felt like I saw this through the observations she’d make whenever she would notice a door wasn’t locked or whenever Hall showed her having panic attacks and she’d have to take deep breaths to get through them. I feel like I haven’t seen these topics covered in a book before like this and I appreciated the way it was done here.  

I also enjoyed getting to read the obituaries Coco writes about the elderly characters in the story who died. I felt like they were all wonderful tributes to the people being described and helped show me as a reader what makes her character such a wonderful writer. It was also nice because I was able to read about characters I didn’t get to really meet in this story and find out what they were truly like. The obituaries just felt like a nice addition to have in this book to help remind me of these characters and how they lived their lives. 

However, there’s a lot with this book I didn’t enjoy as well. For starters, once the reader finds out who’s responsible for all these deaths, I feel like there’s still a lot of unanswered questions that the epilogue does nothing to truly answer. I also felt like the reveal itself regarding who killed her family and who was responsible for the deaths of members of the elderly wasn’t all that surprising. Yes, I had a different idea as to who I thought was involved and am glad I was incorrect but wasn’t surprised by who was involved or the reason as well. Considering the threatening obituaries about herself Coco was receiving, it didn’t surprise me too much that these characters were involved. There’s so much buildup until the climax only for the reveal to be characters I never liked to begin with, and I felt pretty disappointed by how it was handled. Especially because the motivation for it all was pretty predictable too. Way too predictable for me and I absolutely hated it.

What I also disliked about What Never Happened was the characters themselves. Yes, I felt sympathetic to Coco and everything she went through, but I felt like her character at times embodied the trauma she went through when she was a teenager. It felt like that was the only aspect of her character I truly saw throughout the book even when events were unfolding in the story, and I wasn’t fond of it because I felt like there could’ve been more to her than we could see. Even her aunt Gwen I wasn’t really all too fond of either along with her best friend Maddy who I felt like was in the story just to be the villain. I felt like a lot of the characters in this book were one dimensional with very little to their personalities. I also didn’t like how the one character I actually did end up liking, Noah, Hall gave him an ulterior motive when it came to his relationship with Coco. I wasn’t fond of that because I found the dynamic of their relationship refreshing and felt like that ruined what could’ve potentially been a good relationship for Coco to have when she didn’t have that many.

I overall enjoyed reading What Never Happened because it did a wonderful job of keeping me in suspense, felt like it had some themes that needed to be covered and enjoyed reading the obituaries of the characters we didn’t get to meet. However, I was disappointed by the reveal of what happened and why as it wasn’t all that surprising, and I found all of the characters very one dimensional. So while I enjoyed the story in this book, I was disappointed by its conclusion.  

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑