Her Every Fear by Peter Swanson #BookReview

About this book…

Following a brutal attack by her ex-boyfriend, Kate Priddy makes an uncharacteristically bold decision after her cousin, Corbin Dell, suggests a temporary apartment swap – and she moves from London to Boston.

But soon after her arrival Kate makes a shocking discovery: Corbin’s next-door neighbour, a young woman named Audrey Marshall, has been murdered. When the police begin asking questions about Corbin’s relationship with Audrey, and his neighbours come forward with their own suspicions, a shaken Kate has few answers, and many questions of her own.

Jetlagged and emotionally unstable, her imagination playing out her every fear, Kate can barely trust herself. so how can she trust any of the strangers she’s just met?

My review…

If Alfred Hitchcock were alive today then he would be chomping at the bit to get his hands on the film rights to Peter Swanson’s books. They have all the perfect ingredients for translating onto the big screen-dark and atmospheric, character driven with a strong focus on moral dilemmas. Yes, this book had a lot to live up to after The Kind Worth Killing but Peter Swanson has done a great job here!

Right from the start I found myself able to enter the character of Kate and I practically lived the whole novel through her eyes -I really felt every last drop of her panic attacks and paranoia as a crushing weight upon my chest! Her journey to her cousin’s posh Beacon Hill apartment, her meetings with the neighbours and her exploration of her new surroundings felt creepy as hell to me especially as I understood how difficult the whole change in her lifestyle was for her. Her nervousness transferred itself to me, the reader, and my heart rate climbed steadily the further into the storyline I delved.

Although Kate’s was one point of view there were actually three others telling their stories throughout. These acted as the perfect antidote to Kate’s growing hysteria and, although i have never been a huge fan of telling the same part of the plot through another’s eyes, it actually worked well here. The twists in the plot were unexpected and carefully thought through leading up to some shocking developments towards the end. And I have to say that, although their roles are small, I absolutely adored Kates parents-the author perfectly conveyed that feeling as a parent where you want to protect your child but know you have to let them go- I’m not sure I would have been able to after all that Kate had gone through!

If you love Hitchcock and Highsmith then you will love this! It’s a masterpiece of storytelling noir, full of dark corners and shadows where nobody is quite what they first appear to be. Be prepared to read it with the lights on!

Her Every Fear is published by Faber and Faber on 10th January and is available to purchase from Amazon UK here.

Meet the author…

Peter Swanson is the author of The Girl with a Clock for a Heart and The Kind Worth Killing. He has degrees from Trinity College, the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, and Emerson College. He lives with his wife in Somerville, Massachusetts, where he is at work on his next novel.

Published by

jorobertson2015

I am a Norfolk girl living in leafy Cheshire with my grumpy Scotsman. A mum and nana who lives for my family but who is also addicted to reading (and Marmite!) I will read almost anything but my preferred genres to review are psychological thrillers, crime procedural novels or women's fiction. My kindle is my life but I also have a substantial bookshelf in my cosy reading room where I can go to escape the stresses of family life with plenty of tea and chocolate. I am a member of netgalley and bookbridg. I review on Amazon, where I'm a Top 500 reviewer, and Goodreads. You can always find me over on Twitter @jocatrobertson for any review requests.

19 thoughts on “Her Every Fear by Peter Swanson #BookReview”

  1. I can’t wait until next week to give this one a try! I love that he seems to have wrote something different from The Kind Worth Killing which I did love, but sometimes it’s fun to see an author go in a different direction

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