Getting home for the holidays turns into a nightmare for five strangers.
High school student Mira Hayes has been living in San Diego with her dad while attending a prestigious art school. Now it’s Christmas Eve, and all she wants to do is get home to Pittsburgh and her mom, who, like Mira, is grieving the death of her twin sister, Mira’s aunt Phoebe. But a blizzard may thwart her plans. During a layover in Newark airport, Mira learns that every flight out has been canceled. Luckily, Mira’s seatmate Harper offers her a ride in her rental car along with three other stranded passengers: Brecken, Kayla, and Josh, but Mira is uneasy from the start. Accepting a ride with strangers usually isn’t her thing, but she’s desperate to get home. However, snarled traffic forces them to resort to risky side routes, Mira feels like she’s being watched, and the group’s belongings keep disappearing. As their situation becomes more dire they make reckless decisions, leading readers to wonder if anyone will get home alive. Richards does a serviceable job of building tension, but aside from Mira, who narrates, the other characters are thinly drawn. Letters to Mira from a menacing stranger are sprinkled throughout, but their melodramatic nature detracts from the threat, and last-minute revelations stretch credulity. Everyone seems to be White except for Harper, who is Chinese American.
This chilly road trip is woefully short on thrills.
(Thriller. 14-18)