Skip to content

The Sea of Lost Girls

The Sea of Lost Girls Book Cover The Sea of Lost Girls
Carol Goodman
Fiction
William Morrow Paperbacks
March 3, 2020
Paperback
336
Free from publisher

Tess has worked hard to keep her past buried, where it belongs. Now she’s the wife to a respected professor at an elite boarding school, where she also teaches. Her seventeen-year-old son, Rudy, whose dark moods and complicated behavior she’s long worried about, seems to be thriving: he has a lead role in the school play and a smart and ambitious girlfriend. Tess tries not to think about the mistakes she made eighteen years ago, and mostly, she succeeds.

And then one more morning she gets a text at 2:50 AM: it’s Rudy, asking for help. When Tess picks him up she finds him drenched and shivering, with a dark stain on his sweatshirt. Four hours later, Tess gets a phone call from the Haywood school headmistress: Lila Zeller, Rudy’s girlfriend, has been found dead on the beach, not far from where Tess found Rudy just hours before.

As the investigation into Lila’s death escalates, Tess finds her family attacked on all sides. What first seemed like a tragic accidental death is turning into something far more sinister, and not only is Tess’s son a suspect but her husband is a person of interest too. But Lila’s death isn’t the first blemish on Haywood’s record, and the more Tess learns about Haywood’s fabled history, the more she realizes that not all skeletons will stay safely locked in the closet.

My review:

This is my second book by this author (here is my review for The Night Visitors), and I'm a fan of her writing style and mysterious plots. She does a great job creating a setting that is ominous and creepy. In this case the story takes place on the campus of a boarding school on the coast of Maine, where several girls have been "lost" over several decades. One woman with a secretive past has returned to teach at the school, and when her son's girlfriend turns up dead , both he and her husband (a fellow professor) are suspects. The writing flows well so that the story moves at a fast pace with clues thrown in constantly that will probably help a good sleuth reader, but just kept me clueless until the final few chapters.

A fast paced who dunnit with a great cast of characters in a foreboding setting should resonate well with most readers who like a good mystery.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *