The White Cross
Book
Praise for the TPB edition: 'Brilliant. Really brilliant! The characterisation was excellent and...

Tropic of Cancer
Book
Shocking, banned and the subject of obscenity trials, Henry Miller's first novel Tropic of Cancer is...

If Nobody Speaks of Remarkable Things
Book
'This novel owes as much to poetry as it does to prose. Its opening, an invocation of the life of...

Lost Rider
Book
Lost Rider is the first novel in the Coming Home series from New York Times bestselling author...

Gods without Men
Book
Gods Without Men is Hari Kunzru's epic novel of intertwined lives and a vast expanse of American...

Zero K
Book
Jeffrey Lockhart's father, Ross, is a billionaire in his sixties, with a younger wife, Artis...

Bright, Precious Days
Book
Russell and Corrine Calloway have spent half their lives in the bright lights of New York. Theirs is...

Cecil Dreeme
Christopher Looby and Theodore Winthrop
Book
"Heterosexuality, this novel forthrightly claims, is a poor substitute for passionate love between...

ClareR (5950 KP) rated Girl in the Walls in Books
Mar 21, 2021
A young girl has the ability to disappear into the walls of a house and live alongside the people who live there without their knowledge. Now if that doesn’t sound like a ghost story, then what is she? I think that the girl wanted to be like a ghost - themes such as grief and belonging are prominent in this novel. The only attachment the girl has, is to the house itself - she seems to have no family or friends.
There is such an eerie feeling to this book that really unsettled me, and as the boys who live in the house start to realise that someone else is living there with them and look for outside help, the anxiety is tangible. Frankly, there were some breathtaking moments of the “Oh no!” variety.
I honestly can’t believe that this is the authors debut novel - it’s really that good.
Many thanks to The Pigeonhole and to A. J. Gnuse for reading along with us.