Foto dell'autore

Anna Bailey (1) (1995–)

Autore di Where the Truth Lies

Per altri autori con il nome Anna Bailey, vedi la pagina di disambiguazione.

2 opere 247 membri 22 recensioni

Opere di Anna Bailey

Where the Truth Lies (2021) 167 copie
Tall Bones (2021) 80 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
1995
Sesso
female
Nazionalità
UK
Luogo di nascita
Bristol, England, UK
Istruzione
Bath Spa University

Utenti

Recensioni

Read this for my bookclub and I went into it thinking I wouldn't really like it - not my style of mystery. However, it kept my interest and I thought the characters were well drawn. It does hit on several tough topics (domestic violence, homosexuality, incest), have not had the bookclub meeting yet and I am curious to see how our discussion will go.
½
 
Segnalato
carolfoisset | 17 altre recensioni | Mar 31, 2024 |
Where the Truth Lies by Anna Bailey is a recommended murder mystery set in an insular small Colorado town. Considering I love a good thriller this was just up my alley. I have somehow fallen a rabbit hole that is mysteries this year that will continue into 2022. I think because my best friend loves anything to do with a crime that I enjoy these even more.

Emma's best friend Abigail is missing after a party held in the woods outside the small Colorado town of Whistling Ridge. The last time she saw her friend, Abi was going to meet a boy in the woods... and then she disappeared. She does not believe Abi ran away without telling her first, but when evidence is discovered that something happened to her friend, Emma sets out to uncover the truth. The trouble is that this is a town full of secrets and prejudices that everyone is hiding and violence always seems just behind every turn.

The plot moves along at a swift pace and the tension keeps you reading. I felt that every word had its place on the page making it a joy to read.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
b00kdarling87 | 17 altre recensioni | Jan 7, 2024 |
Cuando Emma se separa de su amiga Abigail durante una fiesta nocturna en el bosque, en la que todos han bebido más de la cuenta, todavía cree que sus vidas están a punto de empezar. Pero Emma no volverá a ver nunca más a su amiga. Sin embargo, lo que ocurre a partir de este momento en Whistling Ridge, un remoto y claustrofóbico pueblo de Colorado, es mucho más que la historia de una chica desaparecida.

Es una historia de rencores y secretos, resentimientos y rabia, amor y mentiras. La desaparición de Abigail hará que la fachada de hipocresía y fervor religioso, que domina a los habitantes del pueblo, se desmorone y que la lucha de Emma por descubrir la verdad convierta a todos los vecinos del pueblo en sospechosos y cómplices de la tragedia...… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
AmicanaLibrary | 17 altre recensioni | Apr 10, 2023 |
While reading Anna Bailey’s Tall Bones I was reminded of Philip Larkin’s This be the Verse. Yes, it’s the one which notoriously starts with an F-word and then, in a startlingly lyrical shift, tells us that “man hands on misery to man/it deepens like a coastal shelf”. At one point, one of the novel’s characters almost paraphrases this same thought: “Even if they live…we all end up with our children’s blood on our hands, one way or another”.

Whistling Ridge, the predominantly white, predominantly Baptist town in the Colorado Rocky Mountains where Tall Bones is set, has a particularly high incidence of problematic parents. The worst dad accolade, however, must surely go to Samuel Blake, Vietnam War veteran, alcoholic and Bible-basher. His wife Dolly and children Noah, 17-year old Abi and young Jude bear the physical and emotional scars of his righteous wrath. But Samuel is not the only bad guy in the vicinity. Pastor Lewis uses the pulpit to incite hatred against anyone who is different, whether gay or outsider (imagine what he does to Romanian immigrant Rat, who is both). Landowner Jerry Maddox is a racist with a penchant for young girls.

As one can imagine, Whistling Ridge is hardly the most entertaining place on earth and so when Abi Blake disappears after a party in the woods, there is some hope that she might have simply escaped its suffocating small-town atmosphere. But her best friend Emma, guilty at having gone home without Abi, is afraid of worse. Sheriff Gains seems to share her opinion, even while seemingly hiding dark secrets of his own.

Tall Bones develops into a riveting thriller with plenty of dark, Gothic tropes – a missing girl, cabins in the woods, car chases, night-time escapades, fiery preachers, shady sheriffs. Bailey certainly knows how to build atmosphere and how to delay the revelation of the mysteries at the heart of the book. At the end of a horrific ride we are even regaled with some emotionally cathartic scenes.

I found Tall Bones to be great fun (although “fun” is hardly a suitable word to use for a novel featuring graphic violence and multiple stories of abuse). Only time will tell whether it will also be a memorable read for me – I doubt it though, since I felt it did not do anything particularly new with the tropes it relies on. Part of the problem is, perhaps, that the novel’s villains are almost irremediably flawed. Characters such as Samuel and the pastor have few positive traits if at all, and no serious attempt is made to understand how their characters have been shaped - in the case of Samuel there is a reference to a possessive mother and a disturbing event in Vietnam but even these traumatic events hardly explain the monster portrayed. As an atmospheric thriller, Tall Bones works perfectly. As a character study, it is less successful.

https://endsoftheword.blogspot.com/2022/02/tall-bones-by-anna-bailey.html
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
JosephCamilleri | 3 altre recensioni | Feb 21, 2023 |

Liste

Statistiche

Opere
2
Utenti
247
Popolarità
#92,310
Voto
½ 3.5
Recensioni
22
ISBN
21
Lingue
5

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