
Member Reviews

Ciara and Oliver have a meet-cute in the grocery store two weeks before lockdown. To continue their new romance they only have one choice....quarantine together. 56 days later police find a body.
56 Days is the first fiction book I've read that takes place in the time of COVID-19. Going in I was a bit apprehensive that it would feel too gimmicky or forced. Fortunately the author found a way to perfectly weave certain aspects of the pandemic into the plot in a way that added to the suspense and feeling of unease. While I wish there had been a few more twist and turns this is still a fab (and timely!) thriller.

56 Days is the first book I've read that takes place during the covid lockdown. I really liked that, as it allows for the extremely unusual circumstances of a global pandemic to shape the narrative. I found the book hard to put down. It was in equal part, thrilling and surprising! I also enjoyed seeing what happened through the lens of both of the main characters. I highly recommend this title. Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for allowing me to read this digital arc.

I have alwways loved CRH's work so was really excited to be accepted for this on Netgalley! Set during the pandemic, it focuses on Ciara and Oliver who start a relationship in the weeks prior to the Irish lockdown so make the best of a bad situation. It's quite dark and is so full of twists.....I had an inkling what was going on with Ciara but then another twist hits and it was and wasn't what you are led to think! And Oliver....well 😱 Very clever and although I didn't think I would enjoy a book about lockdown, this one was brilliant! Pick it up when it's released ❤

56 days ago: Oliver and Ciara are dating and getting to know each other. As they start that stage where they only want to be with each other, COVID-19 hits Ireland. They make the decision to move in together. Now: A decomposing body is found at Oliver’s apartment.
It took me some time to get into this one. There is a lot of back and forth, jumping around, and same situations in different point of views. Once I got the flow of the book, the pacing started to pick up. The last third of the book sealed the deal as a five star read. There were unexpected twists, some of which entirely changed my emotional experience. Overall it turned out to be a darker and more somber than thriller read, but it was perfect.
“People think the decisions you make that change the course of your life are the big ones. Marriage proposals. House moves. Job applications. But she knows it’s the little ones, the tiny moments, that really plot the course. Moments like this.”
56 Days comes out 8/17.

After the initial pages, I found myself not connecting with the story or characters, so I decided to pass on this book. Did not finish

This was a book I didn’t realize I needed. I was concerned about the plot focusing on COVID and that it might be just a bit “too soon” but the author did a wonderful job not overdoing it. COVID was utilized to enhance the plot and not present as shock value or an unnecessary additive.
This was a wonderfully written, twisty thriller that I couldn’t put down. Definitely recommend this to all my fellow thriller readers out there.
Thank you NetGalley for the advanced reading copy for an honest review.

I know what you’re thinking…. Why would I want to read a book about Covid? It’s still happening. It’s too fresh. It’s too soon.
So let me begin by saying first and foremost that this is NOT a book about Covid. This is a book set during the time of lockdown in Dublin, so of course there are elements of that isolation that are woven into the plot, but it was handled well and with care. In my opinion, there was nothing solicitous nor anything that diminished the tragedy and heartbreak of Covid. There are no sick people, no doctors, no hospitals. This isn’t a book about Covid, but the pandemic is used as a reason for the characters to be socially isolated.
What this book is also NOT is a story of two people locked in an apartment for 56 days. Goodness no! There are layers, and there is depth and there are plenty of locations around Dublin in which the narrative plays out.
With that out of the way – WOW! I really enjoyed reading 56 Days. It was certainly
surreal to read about someone’s perspective from lockdown in another country.
This is a story of an unprecedented time and two people in a brand new relationship forced to make an outlandish decision. The plot unfolds from each of their perspectives as details emerge about the rise and fall of their relationship. Most fascinating – one of them is dead, and because of lockdown, no one is looking for them.
Finally, just when I thought I’d figured it out – BAM – plot twist!
I loved 56 Days and will now absolutely be reading the author’s backlist titles as soon as I can!
My thanks to @NetGalley and @BlackstonePublishing for the opportunity to read this book before its August 17 publication date.

The author, Catherine Ryan Howard, did a really nice job of working the covid pandemic into this plot. The characters were headed in one direction, but then when the lockdown occurred, the author deftly worked each aspect of the new social order into the plot, enhancing the story greatly.
The determination of our main character to learn what actually happened 17 years prior to cause the death of her brother as well as the mother’s unrelenting grief and the sister’s just wanting to put all that behind her were all too believable. Characterization of the main players was excellent.
Flipping back and forth in the storyline from “now” to 56 days ago, 55 days ago, 35 days ago started out OK. Then it got to be utterly ridiculous. We were jumping weeks prior to 56 days, then weeks prior to today, then days before that, then weeks before that. The mental gymnastics necessary for keeping the story straight became quite exhausting.
And the finale? Let me just say that after the huge build up, it was disappointing. It was as though the author had simply worn herself out before the ending. I was certainly worn out.
I’m thankful to NetGalley and the publisher, Blackstone Publishing, for providing this ARC to me. This review was entirely voluntary and my own thoughts.

I LOVED Catherine Howard's last novel and requested this one so fast. I couldn't get my hands on this arc any faster haha.
So... about that...... sadly this was nothing near the talent from her last book The Nothing Man.
56 days.... the covid books are coming my friends haha.
Oliver and Ciara barely know one another but they decide to spend two weeks of covid lockdown together. What could possibly go wrong?
A lot of back and forth emerging timelines in this one until the final reveal at the end.
Ok... I was extremely bored.... so much repetitiveness and I skimmed half the book I feel like? Also, wayyyy to long this could have been 150 pages less.
The ending was ok... but I just was already frustrated with the majority of the book.
Overall, 2.5/5 stars.
Thank you so much to Netgalley and Blackstone Publishing for my arc in exchange for an honest review.
Pub date: 8/17/21
Published to GR: 6/21/21

I absolutely loved this book! On the surface a couple meet and start dating and decide to move in together when the COVID lockdown is announced so that they can see each other. This timeline alternates and we realize that one of them is dead 56 days after they meet. I loved how the back stories of the two main characters were slowly revealed layer by layer.
Oliver was such an interesting character in particular. I felt a little sympathetic towards him, and a little torn about that for reasons that I won’t get into in a spoiler free review. I also really enjoyed the banter between the gardaí at the crime scene and the little glimpse into their lives.
The plot was superb; built upon gradually with revelations coloring my earlier perceptions differently. I wondered until the last page how it would end, and loved how it did. A superbly written and marvelously clever book. Catherine Ryan Howard is an auto buy author for me now.

I was so excited to recieve a copy of this book and I am so happy it did not disappoint. The storyline was original and clever. I thought it was a great idea to use covid-19 l9ck down as a way to develop a murder mystery. I loved the alternating timelines and narrators throughout the book. You got to see each person's point of view and find outwhat each person was hiding because they both had secrets. At a certain point there were so many twiststhat I could not put the book down until I knew what actually happened. I love all the twists. This was a fun and crazy read that I simply could not put down and I enjoyed thoroughly.

A crazy read with a hell of a twist at the end. I liked the characters in this story. The background of Oliver’s life was well thought out and brought to life. The writer has perfectly conveyed the line between villain and someone you could fall in love with. The ending was phenomenal and shocking.
At first I thought the way it was told was unique going backwards from finding a body and alternately forwards from Oliver and Ciaras meeting. But the back and forth became hard to follow and choppy and a lot of the story then overlapped and was almost repeated. The story itself was great but the style of writing really took away from it for me.

My first COVID-19 book! This was almost surreal to read since COVID is just on the downslope. It was well written and had my interest throughout the whole book. I really loved how you weren't sure what both characters motives were but I was definately surprised by the ending!
Thanks to Netgalley for a digital copy in exchange for an honest review.

First, thank you to the publishers at Blackstone Publishing and Netgalley for this e-ARC of 56 Days.
56 Days is a crazy good murder mystery, a true whodunnit and why?
Taking place during the beginning of the Covid-19 lockdown of 2020, Ciara and Oliver meet via the fates and begin a relationship just a few weeks before everyone must be designated to their own households for at least 2 weeks. This untimely event seems to spell the end of their relationship, or does it?
When a body is discovered after almost 5 weeks of lockdown, Lee, a detective called to the scene, immediately thinks murder, but was it?
Switching between three points of view, Ciara, Oliver, and Lee, you’ll love the back and forth timeline happening in 56 Days. It really showcases the writer’s strengths in constructing a great whodunnit! I was completely shocked by the events as they unfolded. The story starts off a bit slow, but once all three voices are introduced, it really begins to take off!
The ending is crazy good! At first I thought this was happening, but it turned out to be something completely different. This is an unputdownable thriller with plenty of twists and turns! 56 Days releases August 17! Preorder today!

When I began this book, I thought it was a routine psychological thriller of the girl-meets-boy-and-boy-turns-out-to-be-a-psychopath variety, with a bit of hand sanitiser thrown in to make it topical. That all changed when the police characters, Lee and Karl, made one of the most squirmingly memorable entrances by a detective duo I've read.. From this point on, I had a real page-turner on my hands, told via three timelines from the viewpoints of Lee, Ciara and Oliver.
In March 2020, 25-year-old Ciara is new to Dublin when she meets Oliver who's even newer to the city, only resident there a week. Sadly, the spark between them looks set to be extinguished by the global pandemic and the Irish government's ban on meeting anyone outside one's own household. On the spur of the moment, Oliver invites Ciara to spend lockdown with him.. Ciara suppresses her doubts about moving on the relationship so quickly. After all this lockdown thing is only going to last two weeks. If it doesn't work out between them, no harm done.
Lee's timeline is set 56 days later when lockdown is still in place and, given the stinking mess that she and colleague Karl discover, plenty of harm has been done in the meantime.
I was uncomfortable about the parallels with a real-life British case, but there was enough other stuff going on for me to keep reading. I guessed two of the twists but was caught out by a third one. My favourite part of the book was the depiction of the pandemic. The author recalled details we all lived through but I'd started to forget: the initial bemusement, nervous humour, denial and then slow acceptance as people fought over loo paper, queued two metres apart and donned masks. The emptying out of the city centre was reminiscent of many a dystopian novel, and so true to 202o. And the pandemic wasn't just a well-described backdrop; it was integral to the story. The particular conditions of the global emergency provided a perfect storm for what happened between the characters.
With thanks to the author, publisher and Net Galley for the opportunity to read an early copy.

First i want to thank Blackstone Publishing, NetGalley and Author for this outstanding ebook copy!
In return for an honest review!
56 Days..... WoW! Let say first I knew this was going to be a wild ride! And I enjoyed every second of it!
I'm so happy someone wrote a story with the covid pandemic added into the mix! I was wondering how long it would take and obviously Howard decided to jump all over it!. Bravo girl! 😍
56 Days Ago..... Ciara and Oliver have just started dating getting to know one another..... When suddenly Covid 19 hits strikes Dublin.
They decided to move in with each other!
56 Days Later...... A body has been found in Oliver's flat!
Only one of them is dead and the other is still alive!
The two detectives Lee and Karl, were great characters. Well played!
I was gripped from the start and it kept me up reading all dang day!
Overall if you enjoy police investigation, twists and tension.and a plot that is tense and full of twist and turns?.
You will not want to miss this amazing electrifying book!
I seriously can not thank Blackstone Publishing, NetGalley and Author for giving me a chance to read and review this compelling advanced ebook copy!

Shortly after COVID-19 arrives in Ireland, detectives are called to the scene of a gruesome crime scene at a Dublin apartment complex. Ciara and Oliver we’re the “meet cute” couple who were occupying the apartment in an attempt to stay together while following the government’s quarantine guidelines. What happened in that apartment during the 56 days they were together that led to the grizzly death of one of them?
I couldn’t put 56 Days down once I started it. This was probably one of the most chilling psychological thrillers that I have read in a very long time. I would recommend it to everyone who likes the genre.

I discovered Catherine Ryan Howard’s writing during the lockdown for the pandemic. I spent the next few months devouring everything she’d written.
So when I saw that she had a new title forthcoming, I couldn’t wait to read it.
Then I discovered that it was set during the pandemic and I thought “not yet.” Everything still felt too fresh. But tonight I picked it up…and devoured it in one sitting.
To say too much about it would give all the twists and turns away. While I’d been worried about reading a novel set during the longest months of my life, the concept genuinely worked. Without it, it would have lacked all believability. It was claustrophobic and twisty and really, really entertaining.
I really wasn’t sure how CRH would top herself after “The Nothing Man,” but “56 Days” managed to. I can’t wait to suggest this title to others.

The first mystery I’ve read which includes Covid, and it’s a good suspenseful read. Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher.

"When lockdown threatens to keep them apart, Oliver suggests that Ciara move in with him. She sees a unique opportunity for a new relationship to flourish without the pressure of scrutiny of family and friends. He sees it as an opportunity to hide who - and what - he really is."
WOW! My jaw is still on the floor.
Who here remembers meeting someone for the very first time. Its heart wrenching, its exciting, you want to spend every waking minute with them. Now, throw covid into the mix. What could go wrong?
Catherine Ryan Howard did an incredible job taking us all on a ride of our lives. This story was engaging and I COULD NOT PUT THIS BOOK DOWN.
I would highly recommend this book to anyone who loves the gut wrenching anxiety feeling while reading a thriller.