Gr 9 Up–A beach house, 10 teenagers, no parents, and the promise of a weekend-long party: friends Meg and Minnie embrace the exclusive invitation, despite the fact that neither of the girls is close to the host. But a storm is brewing on Henry Island. The wind is howling, the rain is pouring, and the local ferry won’t be back until morning. Then people start dying. A creepy DVD warns the teens of their imminent demise, and red hash marks on the wall tally the deaths as the guests’ guilty secrets are exposed and they’re picked off one by one. In the end, it is up to Meg to save herself and figure out who is killing her friends and why. Though character development and motivation are a bit weak, McNeil’s novel nicely parallels Agatha Christie’s classic And Then There Were None (originally titled Ten Little Indians in the United States), and is likewise a quick-paced thriller full of half-facts and red herrings that take readers through the twists and turns of a deadly weekend. While it might not be considered an amazing teen mystery, among the numerous adaptations and stories that borrow from Christie’s 1939 novel, McNeil’s book holds its own.–Jennifer Miskec, Longwood University, Farmville, VA
Meg and her erratic best friend, Minnie, receive a coveted invitation, but the party quickly turns deadly as one guest after another is gruesomely murdered. The fast-paced Agatha Christielike thriller, overpopulated with characters (alive and dead) sees Meg and her crush, T.J., attempt to keep Minnie stable as Meg pieces together convoluted clues. Somehow, the pieces fit together in the end.
Be the first reader to comment.
Comment Policy:
Comment should not be empty !!!