
Member Reviews

The most BINGEABLE thriller - I DARE you to put this one down once you start!
Five college students disappear before opening festivities of Parents Weekend. The parents are all hiding secrets but so are the students...
This story HOOKED me from the start. Fast-paced and entertaining with short chapters (praise be 🙌🏽) this book can easily be read in one sitting (perfect for a beach day or flight.) Part thriller and part police procedural, there's plenty of action to keep the plot moving. A large cast of characters make up the POVs (the parents, the students, the Special Agent) and although it starts off confusing, I promise they will be easy to track as the story progresses. I enjoyed the Easter eggs of Special Agent Keller's past cases (as seen in EVERY LAST FEAR and NIGHT SHIFT.)
This isn't a story with a shocking, complex plot or an unpredictable perpetrator. In fact, I wish my 'pretty-clever-if-you-ask-me' theory was actually correct...it would've been a twistier ending. It wraps up a little too neat for me; I live for the chaos of a multilayered thriller. BUT, if you're looking for a quick, unputdownable and suspenseful read, PARENTS' WEEKEND is where it's at!

Parents Weekend kicks off with an intriguing premise: five college students go missing over a holiday weekend. Are they just off partying, or is something far more sinister at play? As the story unfolds, secrets come to light, and I found myself questioning the true nature and intentions of seemingly perfect families.
This book is a fast paced, easy to read popcorn thriller. It’s entertaining, engaging, and kept my attention from start to finish. While it didn’t blow me away, it was the perfect binge worthy read—I finished it in just four hours! If you’re looking for a quick, suspenseful book to take on a plane, to the beach, or for a lazy afternoon, this one is a solid pick.

This was an interesting novel, once I got past the huge amount of characters and their relavant backstories. The story has several interesting twists, and the conclusion was well executed.

The first few pages I was afraid I'd have trouble keeping the characters straight. But, two chapters in, I had it down. The author did a good job of having each chapter be about one of the families.
It was a clever plot, and I loved the family of the FBI Agent handling the case. I hope we see more of her...and her family.
I could barely put it down.
Thank you to St. Martin's Press and NetGalley for a digital ARC in exchange for my honest review. All opinions are my own.
#ParentsWeekend #AlexFinlay #NetGalley

Finlay knows how to write a popcorn thriller! With short chapters that end on cliff hangers, this one makes you want to read "just one more chapter" until the end. While I was not a huge fan of how this book played out, I can say that it was an overall enjoyable read. I did find the character count to be a bit too high, and had difficulties keeping storylines apart. I was also hoping for more of a twist at the end. However, I did enjoy the getting to step back into the head of "Keller" as we saw her continue her FBI duties in this novel. Overall, I think this was an easy and fast-paced thriller that would be perfectly enjoyed on a beach or curled up on a cozy night.

In true psychological thriller fashion, this story has elements of suspense and mystery, suspicion of which characters are good or bad and gives the reader a sense of unease from start to finish. It is parents weekend for freshman at the University of Santa Clara and the events of the weekend become horrifying for five sets of wealthy and influential parents. When their children don’t show up for a dinner in their honor, panic eventually sets in and the kids are ultimately declared missing. As police and local FBI agents try to piece the mystery together through clues obtained from online posts, blogs and text messages, they are also uncovering secrets that the parents are keeping. This was a fast paced and engaging book with many characters to keep track of. I enjoy Mr. Finlay’s writing style and ability to keep the reader guessing through the twists and turns.
Many thanks to NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press/Minotaur Books for providing me with an advanced digital copy in exchange for my honest opinion.
Publication date: May 6

I love Alex Finlay. This book started off great and sucked me in. But I didn’t enjoy the last part. The conclusion fell very flat and I was still waiting to find out what happened even after it finished. Like the ending wasn’t good enough and I was waiting for a different one. It was weird and didn’t go along with the rest of the story. Characters just showed up at the end that didn’t have much time in the book.

This makes me so sad to say, because I love Alex Finlay's other books. But this one was a miss for me. There were too many characters, with very little actually happening to help drive the plot and mystery. I was lost on who was supposed to be doing what. I wish that instead of getting so much insight into the parents, we would have also gotten more insight into the college kids. The ending felt lackluster to me as well. Maybe it was because I was already so lost with all of the characters. I think it was a great idea, but not executed well unfortunately.

3.5⭐️ I really enjoyed this little mystery thriller. I loved the short chapters and how all the different POV’s worked together.
Five students from Southern California University are set to meet their parents for dinner together during Parents Weekend, but none of them show up. This story follows the point of view of each students parent and FBI Agent Keller as they try to unravel the mystery of what happened to the kids.
This was just a good, solid thriller. I would definitely recommend this thriller lovers.
Thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press for this advanced E-copy in exchange for my honest review.

College kids parents arrive for the long awaited parents weekend. As they sit at dinner waiting for their kids more and more time passes. The kids are called the give and are podcasters and the mystery builds. The kids don’t show up and the police and reporters show up and it becomes a frenzy. Loved to see FBI Sarah Feller in this one. Enjoyed the multiple points of view and liked the uniqueness of the story.

A parents' weekend and a bunch of their kids in post-secondary school. What could go wrong? A lot actually. This book had so many twists and turns, secrets, lies and deception. A perfect recipe for a great read.
I enjoy books with different POV's and told in alternating timelines, but I found this book difficult to keep up with when so many different families and their POV's were involved, not to mention the various family members in their family. I found it quite difficult to keep track of so I would highly recommend writing them down as you read along in this novel to try to keep all the families and their members straight in your mind.
A book that I recommend.

This was a fun fast-paced and engaging thriller with some surprising twists! I loved the multiple different family POVs. I thought it was going to be confusing with how many characters there were is this book, but I didn’t find that to be the case. The last few chapters did feel slightly rushed, but overall the story has enough suspense to make up for it.

This is my 2nd Finlay book and absolutely loved it. The entire time I was kept guessing who the kidnapper was didn't piece it together until Keller did. With as many characters there were, I appreciated the chapters/views being labeled.

When their kids all no-show to a scheduled dinner, during Parents' Weekend at a small, elite college, it's a race in time to figure out where they are. Although the twist was fairly obvious from the beginning chapters, I still really enjoyed this multi-perspective book that dealt with family secrets.

I’ve read a couple other books by this author that I’ve enjoyed more. There were a lot of characters with a lot going on that had nothing to do with the central story of the missing college kids. It held my interest, I just think there are better thrillers out there.
Thanks to Net Galley for the advance copy in exchange for this review.

3.5 stars
Alex Finlay's thrillers are always compulsively readable and an enjoyable ride from start to finish. While Parents Weekend was not at the same level as Every Last Fear and The Night Shift to me, but I thought it was an ambitious novel that felt somewhat satisfying. It's a lot to cover each parent and kid, and I feel like I got a good understanding of all 10+ characters but I do wish he settled on just the children OR made the book longer. I wanted more development between the kids and how they met, I feel like freshman year friendships are such a rich space to write about and that there was more potential. It would've made the mystery more satisfying/interesting to me, and I thought the initial murder victim was incredibly underwritten. I've always enjoyed the author's writing, I think he's really good at character development and was able to juggle all the characters but I just wanted more. This was a fast and enjoyable read, I could not put the book down once I had ~100 pages left.

Five families arrive at a small private college in Northern California to spend the weekend with children for Parents Weekend. Dinner is the first event, but their kids never show up.
The story is told through multiple points of view, the parents of each student, and FBI agent Keller. I enjoyed reading all the sides and the "who could have" and trying to figure out the "why". Pacing was great and the the story-line flowed well, a page turner. The ending just came up a little lacking for me.
Thank you, NetGalley and St. Martin's Press for the ARC. I will adding more Alex Finlay books to my TBR.
3.5* rounded up to 4*

This story was told through multiple POVs and I liked that. Sometimes I don't just because it can get a be convoluted but the author executed this well. I really liked the FBI agent Keller as a character. I wish I was as badass as her. The reason it only got 3 stars is that it dragged out a bit and I felt bored during some portions, but overall still a great read.

I read this within a day!! Even though it's told from five different families, it's easy to keep up and understand. So intense and intriguing! Didn't see the twists especially at the end. Highly recommend this one!!
Thank you #NetGalley for this #ARC

I enjoyed reading this fast-paced thriller about 5 college students who all vanish on the same night that they were supposed to meet their parents for their college’s parents weekend. We have 5 sets of parents dealing with the mystery of why their kids no-showed, and how to find them now (enter Special Agent Sarah Keller). Each chapter alternates between different families, students, and Agent Keller. There’s A LOT of characters in this book, but I found it easy to keep track of each family and their baggage they bring to the table (kudos to the author!).
If you’re comparing this book to all other thrillers out there, I’d give it a 3.5. However, I feel like the overall content and age of the missing students can definitely put this into the YA category, where I’d say it’s more of a 4-star book. For fans of Karen McManus, you should definitely put this book on your radar—however, expect less romance and hooking up.
Overall, this is a fast-paced read, lots of family drama, and not overly violent or sexual book. Thank you to the author, publisher, and NetGalley for an ARC of this upcoming novel in exchange for my honest review.