Sadie by Courtney SummersMy rating: 5 of 5 stars
The unique concept and style is absolutely stellar. I was completely captivated, even when I didn't want to be.
This is a YA suspense story about Sadie, a teenager who goes missing after her 13-year old sister is murdered. It's told in two unique, alternating parts. One part is Sadie's POV, right up until the point at which she officially disappears. The other part is a missing person's podcast, presented just like an investigative story, as the podcaster travels, researches, and interviews people trying to piece together what might have happened to Sadie.
This story is dark, ugly, emotional, and gut-wrenching, but you won't be able to look away. It reminds me a bit of watching those hour long investigative shows that I grew up with as a child, where they try to track down answers to unsolved mysteries, murders, and disappearances.
The unique style lends itself well to an audiobook format, so I highly recommend this book on audio.
Book 29 read in 2019
Pages: 311
Somehow I began this series with the second book, but one of the best features of the series is each book's ability to stand on its own. Maisie is an intelligent, clever woman working as a private investigator and psychologist in and around London, during the period between the world wars. Her background makes her uniquely suited for the work; she began life under the stairs as a serving girl in a great house in London. However, starved for knowledge, she would sneak up into the grand library and spend her nights reading, which came to the attention of her employer, suffragette Lady Rowan Compton. She became Maisie's patron, taking the remarkably bright youngster under her
wing. Lady Rowan's friend, Maurice Blanche, often retained as an
investigator by the European elite, recognized Maisie’s intuitive gifts
and helped her earn admission to the prestigious Girton College in
Cambridge, where Maisie planned to complete her education. But when the first World War broke out, she lied about her age and went to the front as a nurse. The station where she worked was destroyed by artillery fire leaving her injured and the doctor she had fallen in love with, a shell of a man. The writer is vague about his injuries, but he remains in hospital the rest of his life, unable to speak. Maisie returned to her studies and an apprenticeship with Maurice Blanche, which explains how she came to her career as an investigator with profiling skills.