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The Red House
The Red House | Emily Winslow
3 posts | 2 read | 16 to read
Maxwell’s fiancée, Imogen, is obsessed with her idyllic childhood in Cambridge, England, which was cut short by her parents’ deaths at a young age, causing her and her siblings to be adopted by different families. With plans to move back there, the young couple travel to the city together, where Imogen’s excitement is offset by Max’s deeply unsettling déjà vu: despite having no history there, something about Cambridge is all too familiar. As the wedding planning begins and Imogen’s preoccupation with her lost younger brother intensifies, Maxwell is forced to consider that he may actually be Imogen’s missing brother. Worse, he fears that she may already know that he is, and be marrying him anyway. Meanwhile, Detective Chief Inspector Morris Keene languishes at home, struggling with a debilitating injury and post-traumatic stress, and his former partner, Detective Inspector Chloe Frohmann, investigates a suicide case in which Morris’ daughter is suspected of having a hand. When buried skeletons are discovered next to an old barn, the suicide is linked back to Imogen’s childhood, revealing horrors of the past and triggering new dangers in the present. The third book by talented author Emily Winslow and featuring Cambridgeshire detectives Morris Keene and Chloe Frohmann, The Red House is a suspenseful and skillfully written mystery, twisting and unraveling in deft and unusual ways as the simultaneous investigations raise the question: for how long can you call your findings pure coincidence? Published by William Morrow
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review
GirlWellRead
The Red House | Emily Winslow
Mehso-so

Like the other novels in the series, this one is told from various points of view in 1st person narrative. Again Winslow falls down with this format, there are too many points of view and she would be so much more effective if she would just stick with her detective team—there is the potential to have great chemistry and it would be an interesting juxtaposition. Instead what happens is the multiple points of view stalls the plot at times.

review
funkyfergie
The Red House | Emily Winslow
post image
Mehso-so

I enjoyed this book, although it took me a while to get into it!

RadicalReader @funkyfergie absolutely gripping title of a book sounds phenomenal showing the most peculiar of stories can make such a beautiful book because they're centered around unusual plots 7y
1 like1 comment
blurb
Liberty
The Red House | Emily Winslow
post image

Afternoon reading: Excited to read the third book in the series. I really enjoy Winslow's writing.

BookBabe Ooh, what a spooky cover! I'm going to have to pick it up. 8y
110 likes11 stack adds1 comment