The Family Plot
Books | Fiction / General
3.5
Cherie Priest
From Cherie Priest, author of the enormously successful Boneshaker, The Family Plot is a haunted house story for the ages—atmospheric, scary, and strange, with a modern gothic sensibility that’s every bit as fresh as it is frightening. Music City Salvage is owned and operated by Chuck Dutton: master stripper of doomed historic properties and expert seller of all things old and crusty. Business is lean and times are tight, so he’s thrilled when the aged and esteemed Augusta Withrow appears in his office. She has a massive family estate to unload—lock, stock, and barrel. For a check and a handshake, it’s all his. It’s a big check. It’s a firm handshake. And it’s enough of a gold mine that he assigns his daughter Dahlia to personally oversee the project. Dahlia and a small crew caravan down to Chattanooga, Tennessee, where the ancient Withrow house is waiting—and so is a barn, a carriage house, and a small, overgrown cemetery that Augusta Withrow left out of the paperwork. Augusta Withrow left out a lot of things. The property is in unusually great shape for a condemned building. It’s empty, but Dahlia and the crew quickly learn it is far from abandoned. There is still something in the Withrow mansion, something angry and lost, and this is its last chance to raise hell before the house is gone forever. Other BooksBoneshakerButton Man and the Murder Tree, TheDreadnoughtFathomFiddleheadFour and Twenty BlackbirdsGanymedeInexplicables, TheNot Flesh Nor FeathersWings to the Kingdom
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Author
Cherie Priest
Pages
368
Publisher
Macmillan
Published Date
2016-09-20
ISBN
0765378248 9780765378248
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"I'm a sucker for a good haunted house book. Or flick, for that matter. Yes, they can be repetitive, and yes, they're a little overdone, and yes, my husband would probably be thrilled if I announced I never wanted to see a horror movie ever again, let's just watch anime, let me go get my textbook to learn Japanese so we can watch it with no subtitles. But that's not going to happen. Well, maybe the learning Japanese part will eventually but not yet.<br/><br/>Part of the draw of a good haunted house is the story behind the menace now threatening you -- something awful happened to somebody somewhere and now they just want to lash out and hurt anyone in their reach, and whoever's in reach needs to figure out what the **** actually happened just to save their own behind. And God only knows why that poor sucker was in reach in the first place -- usually through a situation where they're backed into a corner, where something looks too good to be true because it is.<br/><br/>The awesome thing is that Cherie Priest manages to make it original. I mean, the tropes of the story are there -- they have to be, it's part of a haunted house -- but this time, it's based on a company coming in to strip a beautiful old house of its antique pieces, the hardwood floors, the marble mantlepieces, the old wooden banisters made of wood that doesn't grow in the United States anymore (sidenote: if you ever want to hear about a tragedy, read about some of the decimation of the American chestnut, man...).<br/><br/>And while Priest is famous (infamous?) for her steampunky Clockwork Century books (Boneshaker et al), there's part of me that really feels like this this a return to her Southern gothic roots that she left off with the series of Eden Moore. She brings a lot of cultural flavor to her books that not an awful lot of people manage, and the result is gorgeous.<br/><br/>I also have to say that I really loved Dahlia, our protagonist with a penchant for old houses and a past that's left her just a touch wounded, but determined to make it work and possibly stronger for it. Priest also really managed to convey what it's like to work for a family owned business and the stresses and burdens it brings -- the 'to you it's just another job, but to me it's not just my livelihood but the livelihood of my family and employees' thing. <br/><br/>Good read, either way. Darn you, Cherie, you kept me up until 3 a.m. finishing this book. ;)"
"Great ghost story. Wasn’t scary to me, but it was def a spooky read. "
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Eryn