Cover Image: The Family Upstairs

The Family Upstairs

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

If only I could have had peace to read this in peace as it was so good. It certainly held my attention and I was constantly wondering where everyone is in the present of the storyline. I just had to find out. There was a shock that I wasn't expecting as I thought the story was sure footed so don't give up. I would like to have seen what the adoption parent would have said about Libby finding her family but some things are best left to the imagination so fair dos.

Was this review helpful?

I was sucked into this compelling, twisty well written thriller from the first page. The multiple viewpoints were well realised and it was an effective device for retaining interest and keeping the reader a little disorientated. I was up reading late in the night just to find out what on earth had really happened. Gripping stuff, it's the perfect holiday read!

Was this review helpful?

I have read many titles by this author, but this was not my favourite. I enjoyed it, but I found it confusing, skipping from one character to another, and without a clear divide. I think that says more about me and my advancing years than it does about the author. It was a fascinating story.

Was this review helpful?

The Family Upstairs was a seriously sinister and creepy read. The undertones of the book had me shivering with discomfort, but it was one knockout of a read.

I loved the flashbacks in the book, and I thoroughly enjoyed how the narrative was set out. It was interesting to read it in both first and third-person perspective, which made me feel as if I knew the story, but like Libby, didn't at the same time. This completely drew me in.

This book was dark and creepy. A lot of what was happening in the novel made me feel uneasy, but I was drawn in, and once I started I could not stop. Following the lives of the Lamb family and their succumbing to darkness, it was hard not want to read to the very end.

The ending personally, was rather predictable, but it did have some sinister overtones to it. I wasn't disappointed by the ending per se, but to me, I'd kind of figured it out.


I would definitely recommend this book to fellow crime reading enthusiasts; It is dark, creepy beyond belief, but the mystery of what happened yo to the Lamb family will keep you reading to the very end.

Was this review helpful?

I absolutely loved this book- really could not put it down! So many colourful characters, the story told so beautifully and so many twists that just came coming. Definitely one I will be recommending to everyone.

Was this review helpful?

Full of surprises
8 August 2019
Format: Kindle Edition
Very muddled start _ several scenarios one after the other in different places and different years. This is the third book that I've read recently, by different authors, using this method but this is more people and more time zones than most _ very confusing! As the mystery unfolds the reader is drawn into the story and the book becomes a real 'page turner'. Lots of twists and surprises come swift as the pace quickens. The last chapter is brilliant and rounds off an excellent book

Was this review helpful?

This was slow to start and became quite tedious at times.
Not a good introduction to this new-to-me author.

Was this review helpful?

When Henry and Lucy's mother and father decide to let strangers move into their family home, life as they know it takes a dramatic turn for the worse. For years they have to endure abuse from a man and woman who believe they are superior to every other member of the household.
Will they ever be out of the clutches of evil?
I thoroughly enjoyed The Family Upstairs. With each turn of the page you want, more and more, a happy ending for the poor children that were subjected to the horrors of what can only be described as a cult.

Was this review helpful?

Lisa Jewell is a new author to me. I was gripped from the beginning. I loved the twists and turns as the story unfolded. It was a book I didn't want to put down. A brilliant read and a story I won't forget in a while.

Was this review helpful?

I'm afraid I just couldn't get into this book and put it down. I couldn't get to grips with any of the characters. I'm surprised because I love Lisa Jewell's books. Whilst I've given this feedback here, I won't review this book on any other social media platforms until I've actually read it all the way through. I've only left a star rating here because I've had to.

Was this review helpful?

Dark, twisted ... and enthralling! This one grabbed me from the very first and only loosened it's grip on the very final page.

Following several different threads, this starts off as a really puzzling read; it took me some time to get into the rhythm of it and to begin to separate out the characters in my head, but the time just flew by! With so much happening, it grabbed my attention throughout and whilst the ending made perfect sense I didn't work it out until it was in front of me in black and white.

This is an amazing read, from an author who knows exactly what she's doing. Cleverly structured, creatively plotted and beautifully written with wonderful characters I revelled in this novel, and enjoyed everything about it. An absolutely mesmerising read and one I cannot recommend highly enough. I'm rather in awe of authors like Lisa Jewell who not only manage to come up with a bestseller but succeed in doing so time and time again. Such talent and skill! This is totally different to anything else I've read and as such, is worth a full five stars.

My thanks to publisher Cornerstone Digital for approving my copy via NetGalley. This is, as always, my honest and original review.

Was this review helpful?

Firstly, I appreciate the opportunity to being given this book.

I think I had difficulties reading this text, for the reason that the switches between characters were different in styles that it was hard to figure out straight away what character was speaking and at what point.

The concept was incredible, but I struggled with keeping with the narrative

Was this review helpful?

Lisa Jewell is one of my favourite authors so I was thrilled to get my hands on an early copy of The Family Upstairs. I was utterly gripped right from the start - I read the second half in a day! It has everything I love in a book - an old family mystery, a big spooky house, and a thoroughly creepy atmosphere.

Libby Jones works hard selling designer kitchens to the rich and famous but still only scrapes a living. She has a long-term plan: a few more years in her job and, if she's not been promoted, she's off. Then she receives a letter. She's inherited a house in the famous Cheyne Walk in Chelsea, worth millions. The drawback? Once the home of a weird cult, it was supposedly the scene of a bizarre suicide pact twenty-five years ago - the only survivor was baby Libby. But what really happened that night?

The story is told from three points of view. Libby, Henry (a young boy who lived in the house), and a middle-aged woman now living a hand-to-mouth existence in the South of France. How are these very different people connected?

It would be far more fun for you to read this story without knowing too much about it! So I'll just say I loved the old house, with it's 'hidden' (servants') staircase and sinister locked rooms. Henry was my favourite character, along with Miller - the slobby investigative journalist who helps Libby uncover the secrets in her past. There's a nod to a famous 90s movie about a real-life murderer, the story is jam-packed with twist after twist, the characters are thoroughly engaging, and the final line is an absolute classic. Brilliant stuff!

The Family Upstairs is my favourite read this year and I have no hesitation in recommending it to anyone who loves a clever, twisty mystery with a dollop of chilling gothic suspense.


Thank you to Lisa Jewell and Cornerstone (Random House) for my copy of this book, which I requested via NetGalley and reviewed voluntarily.

Was this review helpful?

Let’s start with the easy bits. The Family Upstairs is another stand-out domestic thriller from Lisa Jewell. It’s a tale that is compelling and twisty. It holds the attention of the reader long after they have come to the end. It’s about power, and survival, and recovering, and not recovering. It describes battles of wills. And it features Jewell pushing the boundaries of the genre, playing with form and function and purposefully blending frothy language with altogether darker themes.
We experience the story through three voices and across two effective timelines: a first person narrator, an everywoman outsider and a woman whose identity is unclear until the last few pages. The tale is the mystery of a house in Chelsea in which three dead bodies and a very much alive baby are found. In the preceding years, a dull upper class family of four had become a dysfunctional community of eleven: a commune gone wrong evocative (oddly) of Animal Farm in its deception and multiple betrayals. How could this happen and what has occurred since?
Technically, this novel is outstanding. Jewell manipulates us readers by allowing us to trust (or not) the three narrators. And the three threads of the narrative weave together and apart, allowing us to contrast and compare, and to consider their reliability and honesty. The shifting sands reflect the key moments of the novel, in which power moves between individuals in a household, both through decisive episodes but also the steady rhythms of oppression over time.
It’s hard to say much more without straying the wrong side of the spoiler line, but I found the second half of the book almost unremittingly bleak. By this time conditions inside the Chelsea house have deteriorated well beyond normal acceptable behaviour. You are compelled to continue to read, but it’s desperately sad stuff. We assume that at least one person who was a child during the commune has gone on to be equally mistreated in the outside world.
What keeps us going is the characters: with the exception of Everywoman, we revel in the ambiguities we’re given. We’re forced to pick sides, especially when fire meets fire. There’s only one truly cardboard character - the shallow abuser Michael - and in his case we feel that Jewell has had rather too much fun creating him. That said, I think it would have been interesting to explore the character of the antagonist, David, in more detail, How had he become what he became?
An unpredictable psychological and domestic thriller, incredibly thoughtful and carefully crafted, though the grimness of some of the events described mean I can’t recommend it for everyone.

Was this review helpful?

Libby has just turned 25 and been left a house. She soon learns it has a very dark past and she is the lost baby. Lucy is homeless and desperate to go home but how. She finds herself having to turn to her ex for help but at what cost. Henry tells the story of the house and its tragic past. Soon all three lives will intertwine and the truth will be known.

This was a story filled with twists. It jumps from the future with Lucy and Libby to the past with Henry. It was a fascinating story and I only figured out a couple of the twists. The plot was interesting and the ending was so good. I'm quite a fan of Lisa Jewell so I knew this would be good and it delivered.

Was this review helpful?

On her 25th Birthday Libby inherits a eight bedroom house in Chelsea . The house is quite rundown . While there Libby who was adopted finds out more about her family..
Her mother & father and another man where found dead with a note suggesting suicide . A 10 month old baby (Libby) was found upstairs in her cot. But there was rumours that their was two other children who lived there but no trace of them was found..
The more you read of this book the past & present come together .
Thanks Netgalley

Was this review helpful?

I went into this book blind , I hadn’t read the blurb or any reviews ,Lisa Jewell is one of my favourite and go to authors so I was excited to read this new one .

This book definitely shows Lisa’s talent . Past and present worlds collide, it was a complex story set in in dual time , it had me immersed in it from the start and totally different to what I was expecting and I loved it. It is told from multiple POV , Libby , Lucy and Henry , but I found it easy to follow ,

In a large house in London’s fashionable Chelsea, a baby is awake in her cot. Well-fed and cared for, she is happily waiting for someone to pick her up.
In the kitchen lie three decomposing corpses. Close to them is a hastily scrawled note.
They’ve been dead for several days.

Who has been looking after the baby?
And where did they go?
Two entangled families.
A house with the darkest of secrets.

One house..
Two families...
Three bodies ....

Was this review helpful?

I’m a huge Lisa Jewell fan and although I really enjoyed this one it wasn’t my favourite of hers. That said, it’s still a great psychological thriller about dysfunctional families, secrets and lies. Intriguing and unnerving in equal measure. The complex storyline is full of twists and turns and is skillfully told from multiple points of view as well as two timelines.

Lisa Jewell fans are in for a treat.

Was this review helpful?

Wow this book was awesome. I cannot express enough how much I loved this book. It is told by 3 different characters. It is really a story filled with lots of drama, tensions, lies and secrets. I cant recommend it hightly enough.

Was this review helpful?

A new book by Lisa Jewell is always a cause for celebration, and while this wasn't my favourite (it will take a lot to topple "watching you" from that spot) it contained all her hallmark twists. The characters, and the relationships between them, were well drawn , and I enjoyed the multi character narration, but did occasionally find the plot a bit too unbelievable to become fully immersed in it.

Thank you to netgalley and Random house for an advance copy of this book

Was this review helpful?