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A review by howlinglibraries
Do Not Go In That House by Ruth Anna Evans
dark
fast-paced
5.0
This was another fantastic story from Ruth Anna Evans that reminded me of how well she can keep me entertained and wreck me emotionally.
Do Not Go in That House follows a podcaster named Maggie who desperately wants to go viral and thinks she might have found her ticket when she has the opportunity to dive into a cold case about a terrible, brutal child death from a decade earlier.
The premise is worrisome enough on its own, but we quickly learn that Maggie has been off of her mental health medications for a bit and mania is setting in hard. Not only does her mental illness add a layer of complexity to Maggie's character, but her mania symptoms and history also go a long way in helping us to understand why she powers through red flags that many people might have ran screaming from.
(As a side note, I don't have bipolar disorder and don't experience mania the way Maggie does, but I have numerous other mental health disorders and a lot of experience with close loved ones' experiences with unmedicated bipolar disorder; for what it's worth, I thought Ruth Anna Evans handled the portrayal very lovingly and honestly!)
All in all, I really enjoyed this story — it might even be my favorite of this author's works so far! The setting was truly unsettling and I enjoyed Maggie as a character. No spoilers, but this story ran my heart through the wringer in the best way, and I can't wait to read more from this author soon!
Thank you to the author for the review copy! All thoughts are honest and my own.
Do Not Go in That House follows a podcaster named Maggie who desperately wants to go viral and thinks she might have found her ticket when she has the opportunity to dive into a cold case about a terrible, brutal child death from a decade earlier.
The premise is worrisome enough on its own, but we quickly learn that Maggie has been off of her mental health medications for a bit and mania is setting in hard. Not only does her mental illness add a layer of complexity to Maggie's character, but her mania symptoms and history also go a long way in helping us to understand why she powers through red flags that many people might have ran screaming from.
(As a side note, I don't have bipolar disorder and don't experience mania the way Maggie does, but I have numerous other mental health disorders and a lot of experience with close loved ones' experiences with unmedicated bipolar disorder; for what it's worth, I thought Ruth Anna Evans handled the portrayal very lovingly and honestly!)
All in all, I really enjoyed this story — it might even be my favorite of this author's works so far! The setting was truly unsettling and I enjoyed Maggie as a character. No spoilers, but this story ran my heart through the wringer in the best way, and I can't wait to read more from this author soon!
Thank you to the author for the review copy! All thoughts are honest and my own.
Graphic: Child death, Death, Gore, Mental illness, Violence, and Schizophrenia/Psychosis
Moderate: Ableism, Self harm, and Suicidal thoughts
Minor: Forced institutionalization