Cover Image: Home Before Dark

Home Before Dark

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

I love an author’s vivid creativity and trying something unexpected to exceed his or her previous writing performances by taking a challenge and trying something brand new.

Riley Sager is one of the most brilliant authors raises the bars and waltz between genres and serves us fresh baked from oven kind of delicious, soul crushing, mind numbing, exhilarating, surprising stories with WTF I just read kind of twisty, the rug pulled out from your feet kind of endings.

This time he dances between horror, supernatural, ghost stories and mix them with true crime, murder, whodunit elements. You sense Amityville Horror, Haunting of Hill House and a little bit “Exorcist”, “Shining” and “Conjuring” vibes. At some parts you sense the author’s tribute to Stephen King novels by using his favorite elements like dysfunctional family dynamics, small town mystery, the thin line between madness and reality.

So get ready to freak out because you’re reading two books at the same time:

One of them belongs to Megan Holt’s POV, inherited a so called haunted house from her father after his sudden death and advised her not to go there again.

Other book belongs to Megan’s father Ewan telling us their 20 days of horrifying experience at the house with his soon to be ex-wife and 5 years old Megan.

Ewan’s part of the book published and haunted Megan’s life forever, prevented her forming normal relationships and having a real social life. She only have one close friend and business partner Allie helps her renovating houses and now she decides to move to Baneberry Hall: the haunted family Victorian estate and learn the truth her family is hiding because she never believed that ghostbusters against paranormal activity bullshit. But as soon as she takes her first step in the house, unbelievable and spooky things start to happen! Megan still has no idea about what happened when she was little and she insisted her parents to come clean but they denied her.


And Ewan’s book is more entertaining and horrifying than Megan’s POV, making you feel like any time Winchester Brothers appear out of nowhere to help the family pouring salt on the floor and put the ghosts on fire. Especially the creepy song plays at the night time gave me so much creeps and huge desire to scream till my throat burns.

I don’t’ want to give more spoils but I may only say the ending is satisfying and some parts are foreseeable but you still want to ask yourself: “What! Why! WTH?” yes, you partly expected some parts but not the whole picture! (I filled like my spidey senses out of juice!)

I also have to add: last two books’ covers of the author are fantastic! They give you a brief warning that something terrifying and disturbing is waiting you as soon as you flip the pages.

Overall: Pacing is good. However, at some parts I lost my interest for Megan’s POV and I enjoyed Ewan’s book so much more, it is still riveting, heart throbbing, nail, elbow, hand, arm biter, unputdowable, creepy story that I’ve dreamt of! I was so ready to sell my not so precious soul to get an ARC COPY and my wish came true.

So I’m giving 3.5 stars rounded up to 4!

Special thanks to NetGalley and PENGUIN GROUP/Dutton Books for ARC of one of the most anticipated thrillers of this year in exchange my honest review and thanks to Riley Sager, I loved this book more than “Lock Every Door”

Was this review helpful?

There are some authors I wait for, anticipating their new book long before its published. Riley Sager is in that category because her books are so clever, so intricately plotted and so shocking that they are completely addictive. In her latest, Maggie Holt, a house restorer, inherits Baneberry Hall when her father dies. Years before, when Maggie was a young child, she and her parents live in the old Victorian. They were there for only three weeks before they fled in supposed terror. Maggie’s father’s book about the events were chronicled in a book called House of Horrors. Maggie remembers nothing of those days and she doesn’t believe in the paranormal, so the inheritance seems like a windfall, She can fix up the place and sell it for a tidy profit. But Maggie isn’t back in the house for long when she begins to wonder if her father’s book was more truthful that she ever believed. I loved this book and its exploration of the Amityville Horror syndrome. Creepy, intense and impossible to put down

Was this review helpful?