Ratings9
Average rating3.9
Reviews with the most likes.
Deliciously creepy and chilling. If you've been looking for a good thriller, pick this one up.
What a book! This book is destined to take you on a crazy ride!
Rose is convinced her sister is shape-shifting, a mare, as her Oma calls it. As she explains what a mare is and what they are capable of, she becomes more and more convinced that her sister Sylvie is a mare. As the story unfolds, it follows Rose's daughter Amy and her friends, Piper and Margot as they try and uncover the mystery of Sylvie's disappearance, and the strange happenings on the grounds of the motel. Piper and Margot are called back into the story line after several years have passed and Amy is accused of murdering her entire family, save one, her daughter, who managed to escape through a window in her room. But the mystery is still there, and the 29th room is still quite undisovered. Does it exist or is it a myth? The mystery only deepens and there seems to be one person who can answer the questions, but she seems very reluctant to talk to anyone.
This story makes you pay attention as it flips between the past and the present. What a story you are in store for! This book will keep you on the edge of your seat the entire way through!
This was fine for a quick (somewhat predictable) thrill, but I much preferred The Winter People.
Since this was my first novel by Jennifer McMahon, I really had no idea what to expect when I picked it on Netgalley. It sounded rather intriguing, and I like dark mysteries - especially when ther's a hint of the supernatural.
And I was very pleasantly surprised by how much I enjoyed reading it. There was nothing predictable about this book - and it's rare that I don't figure out what's going to happen at the end quite early on. The Night Sister was written from the various perspectives of several characters, so we never got quite the whole story. Instead, we got snippets from each person's experience. Looking back, it's clear to see how the ending was foreshadowed but while reading I was totally wrong (when I wasn't in the dark). I loved how McMahon seamlessly took us between three different timelines. It would be easy to get confused with that kind of complexity, but I always knew what was happening and when it was happening.
I ended up closing the book (or rather, turning off my iPad) before I went to bed because I was worried about reading about blood and monsters just before falling asleep. That's silly because it really wasn't that scary - but it was so suspenseful that I stayed on the edge of my seat. Who killed Amy? What happened to Sylvie? Is Rose really crazy? Are there really ghosts? And what is the 29th room?
Luckily, every single one of my questions was answered in the end. I hate it when books don't answer all of the questions they raise - but in this case, I got very satisfying closure.
The book I keep thinking of as comparison is Gone Girl - but that's not quite right. There's not a twist of that magnitude, and the plot has virtually no similarities... but I can't shake the comparison. I think it's because it's dark, it does involve murder, and there's a mystery that you're trying to solve before you get to the end.
I thoroughly enjoyed Night Sister, and you will too if you're a fan of suspenseful mystery. This may have been my first novel by McMahon, but it certainly won't be my last.