Cover Image: The Burning Girls

The Burning Girls

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

A story that follows a vicar and her daughter who move to a new town with a creepy history - missing girls, martyrs, and the "burning girls" which is a creepy back story similar to witch trials. This book started off with so many different story lines, all creepy and suspicious. The author was able to connect them perfectly and the ending was great. A creepy read that had me reading under a blanket late into the night. I always enjoy this author. Check out "The Burning Girls" on sale February 9, 2021.

Thank you Netgalley and Ballantine Books for the advanced reader's copy in exchange for my honest review.

Was this review helpful?

I finished this last night right before bed and literally had a nightmare very clearly inspired by this book. Thanks, CJ Tudor.

This one is quite the page turner, the build up is amazing. I was nervous going in because I don't really like religious-heavy reads, but it was definitely not what I thought it was going to be. Tons of suspense, plenty of interesting characters, and a rich history to uncover.

CJ Tudor does an excellent job of alternating points of view to give you different bits and pieces of the story until it all comes together in a climactic ending. Tudor's books will always be put on my to-be-read list.

If you're into mystery/thriller/whodunnit, I think you would like this book. This is a tiny bit scarier than previous CJ Tudor novels I've read. There are elements of horror that I didn't expect, but very much enjoyed.

Happy reading!

Was this review helpful?

"A vicar with blood on her hands"..

After a scandal arises at her church, Reverend Jack Brooks is sent to the small town of Chapel Croft to serve, and to say the least, her and her teenage daughter Flo are not warmly welcomed. The house is crumbling, the chapel is decrepit, and soon after their arrival Jack receives an eerie exorcism kit and a scripted warning.

That's not all that's wrong with Chapel Croft though. The town has a sordid history revolving around a tradition of the Burning Girls, and martyrs burnt at the stake, oh, and teenage girls going missing..

As if this one couldn't get any creepier, there are subsidiary chapters about a man recently released from prison whom Jack would prefer never to see again.

CJ Tudor never disappoints me! This is a totally creepy, nail-biting, and twisty read! I loved the big finale in this one, so even if you happen to find yourself struggling thought it, (although I don't think you will), it's worth it for the big reveal.

Thank you to NetGalley and Ballantine for this ARC! Set to come out in February 2021!

Was this review helpful?

I was given a copy of this novel by Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

I'm a big fan of C.J. Tudor. I've read everything the author has published. I was eager to get a copy of this arc when I saw it. I had no clue what the novel was about and I jumped straight in.

Tudor has a writing style that I just love. Her chapters are short and you just keep wanting more. I read this very quickly. I loved the topic. Burning girls, exorcisms, moving to a tiny English village with a past that was clouded in mystery. All good stuff. At times this book kind of reminded me a little be of watching Grantchester with vicars and mysteries. I enjoyed all of the povs.

I should have loved everything about this book. My only issue is that I figured out almost every twist early.on. I don't know if that is because it was obvious or if I've read the author so much I just pick up on things. So I'm stuck somewhere between a 3 and 4. I'd still recommend the book to fans of thrillers with horror elements (my favorite) but not Tudors best work. But that being said much better than a lot of other authors out there. I'll still continue to read everything Tudor comes out with.

3.5

Was this review helpful?

C.J. Tudor is one of my favorite authors! Ever since I read her debut I've been anxiously awaiting her next release and this one (like the rest) did not disappoint! This is a nail biting, pull out your hair kind of read. One that you'll be anxiously flipping the pages but wanting to slow down reading so you don't finish it too soon! I loved it so much!

Was this review helpful?

It's not often that I read a mystery/thriller where I'm so caught off guard by the ending, that after finishing, I immediately feel the need to reread the novel to see if I could have possibly predicted where it was going.

Instead of doing that, I will be picking up other C.J. Tudor novels.

Was this review helpful?

A chilling gothic noir that has a deep rooted flair for the paranormal and the darker arts. The storyline plunges readers into the sinister and downright gruesome past of a village while intertwining mysteries of the present. A fantastic, creepy read with formidable characters. #keepthelightson


Thank you to #NetGalley and #BallantineBooks for the ARC of #BurningGirls. Reviews posted by Wayward Readers Book Blog are from publications read voluntarily. All thoughts and opinions are my own.

Amazon/Facebook Blog posts will run week of publication.

#cjtudor #gothicreads #mysteries #imnotscaredyourscared #bookstagram #bookblog #booktweets #gimmemorebooks #bookish

Was this review helpful?

A modern day Gothic mystery that will literally unearth a treasure trove of secrets and lies.
Anticipate the presence of deserted and desolate buildings with the walls festooned with Leviathan crosses, goat-heads, and pentagrams. …. chapels in disrepair with rotting and broken flooring and surrounded by a graveyard inhabited by tilted headstones with illegible
markings and partially covered with overgrown grass and brambles. …. and hauntings and apparitions. This is only a small portion of what’s to come on this fascinating journey.

Chapel Croft is a small hamlet in East Sussex, England which is steeped in a bloody history of martyrdom, mutilation, murder, suicide and the unexplained disappearance of two teenage girls. All events shrouded in secrets, lies and half-truths. In the sixteenth century, during the Marian Persecutions that took place during the reign of Queen Mary, eight villagers were burnt at the stake, for failure to renounce their Protestant faith. This included two girls, Maggie and Abigail who hid in the chapel. They were betrayed, and they were mutilated before being burnt.
Maggie’s eyes were put out, while Abigail was dismembered and beheaded. The town has continued to commemorate this senseless event by yearly placement of “stick dolls” at the base of the tall grey obelisk memorial that resides in the church graveyard. The villagers fashion these small partially burned stick figures in recognition of the two “Burning Girls”
Legend has it, that the ghostly apparitions haunt the chapel grounds. They appear to those in trouble. If you see the burning girls, something bad will befall you. The villagers hope that this yearly tribute will ward off the girl’s vengeful spirits.
To continue the ever present dark cloud over this community, thirty years ago, in May of 1990 two teenaged girls disappeared without at trace. Merry Lane and Joy Harris, were both aged 15 and the best of friends. There was a brief community outcry but no frenetic police search or dredging of the local rivers and streams. Without fanfare, it was presumed that they ran away. And, just weeks ago the local vicar hanged himself in the nave of the church. The motivation for the suicide was unknown, but multiple parishioners commented on his obsession with researching the history of the village. The search for an interim vicar to replace the recently departed Reverend Fletcher was short lived. Reverend Jack (Jacqueline) Brooks is encouraged to transfer from Nottingham with her 14 year old daughter, Flo, to fill the void.
Bishop Durkin recommends the transfer due to the “situation” with Ruby . Jack is being hounded and vilified in the press. “The priest with blood on her hands “…. assuming she didn’t
do enough to stop the beating, torture and death of “little” Ruby.

Jack and Flo arrive at the chapel site. It is small and in disrepair with a surrounding graveyard overgrown with grasses and populated by tilted and illegible headstones. They enter the tiny musty adjacent cottage. …. their new home? On the kitchen table is a package with Jack’s name on it and an attached rather melodramatic Bible verse. Jack opens this ‘present” only to find a leather case, outfitted with a leather-bound Bible, a heavy cross, holy water, strips of muslim cloth, a scalpel, and a serrated knife with several rust brown stains on the blade. Flo queries her “mum” what is that? Jack states , rather simply, it is an exorcism kit.
C.J. Tudor, a masterful storyteller, unwinds a devilishly twisted narrative with elegant prose and characterization of the supporting cast. As Jack is pushed into her own investigation of the intricate events surrounding the history of Chapel Croft, multiple reveals and unexpected secrets and lies are divulged. I cannot avoid presenting a representative cinematic sequence
In the story, that nicely illustrates Tudor’s power and imagery. The following scene represents Jack’s initial presentation to her congregation …. “Welcome every one. The figures in the chapel start to raise their heads. I see my husband, Jonathan. He is smiling, Even now, when his head is caved in one one side, and matted with blood and brain matter. Next to him is Ruby - her face is bruised and swollen from where they beat her with their fists, boots, and even her own wooden toys. I feel something brushing the top of my head, I look up and Reverend Fletcher hangs from the balcony above me, feet twitching in a macabre death dance. I bite back a scream. Two figures rise from their pew and begin to shuffle down the center of the aisle toward me. Halfway down, they burst into flames. …. Mum, wake up!” ( Just a pleasant dream heralding the upcoming calamity of discovery ). Interspersed between the chapters narrated by Flo and Jack , are those relating events through the eyes of Merry and Joy and an unknown man. He has been released from prison and is making a pilgrimage to meet up with Jack … leaving in his wake a path of death and destruction.
Thanks to NetGalley and Random House / Ballantine Books for supplying an Uncorrected Proof of this gem in exchange for an honest review. Be prepared to be thoroughly entertained along this twisted and creepy tale, that is destined to be a modern classic.

Was this review helpful?

As usual I was once again creeped out, scared, and thoroughly entertained by C.J. Tudor's newest book, The Burning Girls. My goodness, that girl sure knows how to keep the spookiness going and creating a story that has all the things I love in my thrillers.

Welcome to Chapel Croft and interesting little town where their claim to fame is the killing of eight Protestant martyrs five hundred years ago. To this denizen of volatile happenings, comes Reverend Jack Brooks and her daughter Flo, assigned to Chapel Croft to fill a gap left by the suicide of the former reverend. They have their work cut out for them for they are the newbies in town, who themselves bear some dark secrets. To add to the mixture, there is also a creepy stalker out to find them having been just sprung from prison.

Things get spookier when facts present themselves. Two young girls went missing some thirty years ago, an exorcism kit turns up plus bloody girl "welcomes" them to the community. Who can forget the very strange young man cozying up to Flo, or the creepy suspicious parishioners who round out a team of chilling participants in a story that keeps the heat on until the last page is turned?

Jack's life is turning to the evil side as she is seeing things, burning girls, and also experiences ominous nightmares. Flo seems also to be chased by the evil that seems to be prevalent in the town and the church. There are uncanny things afoot and though the theme is frightening, the actual cruelty of some of the young characters is what really is eerie.

There is a plethora for the reader to think about, and as usual Ms Tudor hits us with the one two punch, this reader has come to love. I was so looking forward to this book and happy to say, I was not disappointed in the presentation, the writing, and the aura that this author masterfully creates.

So grab this one when it comes out on February 9, 2021. You will not be disappointed.
Thank you to C.J.Tudor, (keep them coming girl), Random House Publishing, and Netgalley for a copy of this stay up all night until your eyes bug out) thriller.

Was this review helpful?

The Burning Girls is Chilling, horrifying, tense, and twisted. This story goes way back to an event that happened many many years ago, about five hundred years ago. Where two girls were burned at the stake. The story is of a vicar and her daughter that relocated after a previous incident, a tragic accident, in her previous diocese. Neither one is happy but they are willing to try. When they hear what happened to the previous vicar the daughter starts to see visions of the burning girls. Is she in danger...
Thanks Netgalley and the publisher for the advance ecopy.

Was this review helpful?

CJ Tudor has done it again! If you enjoy historical fiction and supernatural thrillers you will certainly enjoy this. Started a little slow at the beginning but picked up the pace and leaves you wanting more! Excellent book and if you have read her other books you will certainly enjoy this one!

Was this review helpful?

The Reverend Jack turns parishioner expectations on their head by simply being a woman. She and her daughter are exiled in a small community following a tragedy in which Jack was involved. There are plenty of troubles in the new community, too. Twisty, dark, and suspenseful, this kept me guessing right up to the end.

Was this review helpful?

This book is great! Would definitely recommend. Thanks so much to NetGalley and the publisher for the ARC.

Was this review helpful?

Rev Jack Brooks is reassigned to a new a parish, supposedly haunted by the ghosts of martyrs burned at the stake over 500 years ago. The town is also the site where 2 local girls went missing many years ago. And the stage is set for the new thriller from CJ Tudor, and this is another slam dunk by the author. Creepy vibes, interesting characters, really sharp and witty dialogue (especially from teenage daughter Flo) and a great plot that will require a trip to the chiropractor to untangle all the twists. Absolutely 5 stars! I received an ARC of this book from the publisher through @NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

This is a great little thriller with excellent twists. The characters are solid and feel very real, and the tensions supernatural belief and modern religion, parent-child love and romantic love, and secret-keeping and the duty to reveal truths are all compelling and create a welcome complexity to the story. If you like folklore, history, mystery, and/or coming of age stories, this is the book for you.

Was this review helpful?

I loved C.J. Tudor's last book, so I went into this one with high expectations. The writing in Burnjng Girls was just as I expected - captivating. The writing along kept me reading until the end. I had trouble getting into the book, but I'm glad I stuck it out. That final twist was so unexpected!

I don't let me lower rating fool you. I think for me, the supernatural and religious undertones just aren't for me.

I'll definitely read Tudor's next book!

Was this review helpful?

Awesome complex thriller. Big creepy vibes made the pages turn faster with the lights on. Another fantastic multi layered book!!

Was this review helpful?

I just have to come right out and say that I loved this novel. C.J. Tudor's previous mysteries were fabulous, but The Burning Girls is on an entirely different level. Even the most seasoned reader of mysteries will not see the final twists coming. In fact, the final third of the novel kept me up until 1:30am. I really connected with Jack and Flo; the character development was spot on and all the various threads came together in unexpected, but very clever ways. I highly recommend The Burning Girls to anyone that loves a good mystery, enjoys a bit of English history, and is captivated by the exploration of quirky characters.

Was this review helpful?

A bit predictable but still a good read. Twisted plot and engrossing story. Perfect for taking your mind off of current world events.

Was this review helpful?

C.J. Tudor treads the line of thriller and horror in each and every book. This one involves a small village in which vicar Jack and her daughter Flo move to that houses the history of the burning girls. But that's not it's only secret. Jack is given an exorcism kit early on, but why? Flo becomes friends with an outcast boy who shows her some of the mysteries of the village and dangerous things happen every time they get together.
There were surprises in almost every chapter. CJ Tudor is a name I look for now in mysteries and thrillers and would recommend to patrons and friends looking for a scary thriller.

Was this review helpful?