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40 Days in Hicksville

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"[40 Days in Hicksville] is worth a read, and is a great example of the power of a well-written dual-perspective narrative." — Canadian Review of Materials Every small town has a dark past. Kate is learning that this town's dark past involves her family. Fifteen-year-old Kate didn't want to be dragged into her mother's past. She had a boyfriend, a life, and a future as an online influencer whose urban exploration videos were growing in popularity.But here she is, in the place she thinks of as "Hicksville," and she's getting to know far more about the town than she ever wanted. After she and her new friend Zach make a ghastly discovery in a local crevasse, she finds herself investigating a decades-old mystery that has haunted the community ... and her family. People from her mother's past — and her own — resurface as Kate and Zach uncover secrets that could rewrite history.
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    • Kirkus

      October 15, 2023
      Kate Cooper likes exploring--until a creepy discovery hits close to home. Fifteen-year-old Kate has just moved east across Canada to her mother's childhood home in the small town of Clarendon, which she's dubbed Hicksville--and she's not happy about it. It's just Kate and her mom, as her unstable dad is barely around. Zach Whitchurch, Kate's neighbor and classmate, keeps riding over to her house on his John Deere lawn mower, and the two bond over their mutual interest in Kate's paternal grandfather, who's rumored to have killed his wife. Exploring the woods on her grandfather's property, Kate and Zach come across a crevasse that merits further exploration. But when Zach finds a human skull, it leads to a web of secrets unraveling. The story is told in alternating first-person chapters from Kate's and Zach's perspectives. Character development is unfortunately lacking; it feels like there's little more to Zach than his interest in Kate, while Kate comes across as a stereotypical rebellious teenager. Repetitive events--ditching school to snoop and sneaking into the woods--become tiresome as they drive the story to its underwhelming climax. One highlight of the book, however, is its depiction of how trauma affects families' well-being; Kate's parents each carry demons from their pasts into their present lives. Most characters read white. A thin mystery with ultimately forgettable characters. (Thriller. 12-16)

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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