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RABBIT HOLE by Kate Brody

RABBIT HOLE

by Kate Brody

Pub Date: Jan. 2nd, 2024
ISBN: 9781641294874
Publisher: Soho Crime

A woman reinvestigates her sister’s disappearance after her father's death in this debut.

Teddy Angstrom was 16 when her older sister, Angie, disappeared after sneaking out to a party. Afterward, everything seemed to fall apart. Now, 10 years later, her father has driven his car off a bridge, and Teddy and her mother are left to pick up the pieces. Cleaning her father’s things, Teddy discovers that he was deeply invested in the online community built up around Angie’s disappearance. What began as a daughter trying to close up loose ends in the wake of her father’s death slowly devolves into Teddy finding herself more and more immersed in the true-crime community around what happened to Angie in ways that affect her love life, her job as a high school English teacher, and her relationship with her family. Through it all she’s joined by Mickey, a local college student who was working with her father and is maybe too eager to help. As her life spirals around her, Teddy has to determine what is real and what is in her head. The novel can be stressful to read at times; the first-person narration gives an almost suffocating air to Teddy’s increasing paranoia. Escalating series of bad decisions seem almost inevitable, but there’s a clear logic to how Teddy reaches them, even if, by light of day, it seems fuzzy. Despite a few ham-fisted metaphors and egregiously unbelievable moments, the dizzying pace mixed with introspective passages (not to mention very short chapters) keep readers turning pages so the book flies by.

A timely rumination on true crime, internet obsession, and paranoia.