Cover Image: All the Colors of the Dark

All the Colors of the Dark

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Member Reviews

My thanks to NetGalley and Crown for an ARC of this novel.

Joseph Macaulay is born without a eye in the picturesque little ton of Monta Clare, Missouri, in the late sixties. He doesn’t remember his father, but can never forget how his death in Vietnam tore a hole in the precarious life of his young mother. Ivy gave her little boy a eye patch and a pirate costume to bolster his courage for a lifetime of being different, and he became Patch. But life and loss wore at her and her love for her boy was no match for the alcohol and drugs she needed. Saint Brown, so named because of the joy she brought her grandmother Norma, left to raise her when her mother died after giving her life, arrived in Monta Clare when she was seven. Fiercely precocious, new in a place that didn’t like strangers, with a grandmother who drove a bus and wore her hair so short she was instantly labelled a ‘dyke’, Saint had much in common with Patch. Their friendship was the rare variety that linked their hearts and souls.

The novel centres on Patch and Saint, even though they are physically apart for most of it. The event that overturns their lives takes place when nine-year-old Patch, in his pirate regalia, impulsivey intervenes in an attack on the local rich girl, the beautiful Misty, saving her from abduction and death. Stabbed by the attacker, he is carried away. He is presumed dead by everyone but Saint, who won’t relent, then or for the rest of her life, in her vow to save him.

The story traces thirty years of searching for the human monster who grabbed Patch and many others, he being, accidentally, the only boy taken. Before his rescue by the dogged Saint, in the midst of an inferno, Patch is held in a dark room with a girl named Grace whose magical stories keep him alive. He has no idea if they are real or fanciful, but he sees their dark colours. This ability, metaphorically, becomes both his and Saint’s true skill.

Grace does not get out with Patch, but, as Saint did for him, he won’t give up looking for her. It is a need that leads him at once to destruction and redemption. He knows that ‘bad things peel layers from you’ that love can restore. Saint, even as a child, grasps what happens when you ‘lose the thing that defined you…it left you someone else. A stranger you had no choice but to tolerate, and see each day and feel and fear.’ There are countless near misses, for both Patch and Saint,in a search that eventually resolves hundreds of the countless ‘missing girls’ cases that police often have to abandon. Rarely together, they are never apart.

Anyone who has read the author’s earlier works knows the intensity with which he can write his characters and trace their lives. In short sentences whittled to their essence, in chapters of little more than two or three pages, he draws such evocative pictures that, like Patch and Saint—though in very different ways—the reader can also glimpse the ‘all the colours of the dark.’ He is simply a masterful writer. Despite the book’s length, it pulled me in without pause for as long as I had the hours to read. It’s the kind of novel that makes you want to know the ending but not want to have it end. It is melancholic but funny, despairing but hopeful. Whenever I thought I had the next step figured out, the story changed abruptly but plausibly. There were moments when the twists and turns were hard to keep up with, especially the many cases of missing girls and the many locations travelled, but none felt extraneous. The supporting characters, Chief Nix, Dr Tooms, Norma, and Misty, and the hilarious Sammy, offer wisdom and humour. No matter the hurt of the moment, or the age of the character, Norma always thinks going for ice cream at Lively’s will help. And the unbelievably kind and fair Chief, in many ways filling in for the children’s missing fathers, observes that ‘Noble acts…don’t always end anywhere good.’

This is a superb novel, much more than a mystery-thriller, though it excels there too. It is not a romance, but it is about love and hate and how they work in human lives.

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I’ll be honest… I was nervous to read this ARC. I absolutely LOVED Whitaker’s previous novel, “We Begin at the End”, and was afraid “All the Colors of the Dark” wouldn’t live up to my sky high expectations. Thankfully, I was not disappointed! This book was just as wonderful and fantastic as I had hoped it would be.

Simply put, this book is about love. Friendly, romantic, all consuming, sweet, unrequited, timeless love. The story spans decades and is told in a lyrical style, mainly following the perspectives of two childhood friends, Patch and Saint. Oftentimes quiet and tender, the story is a lifelong journey told piece by piece. It starts out slow, but as the pieces pile up the story builds and things start falling into place. The conclusion is stunning and completely worth it; the last few sentences in particular had me in tears.

While I really enjoyed Patch and his journey, I absolutely loved Saint. I really admired her relentless determination and endless love. At many points I wanted to reach into the book and just give her a hug.

The only thing keeping this from a full five stars for me was the length- I felt it was a *little* long and the pace occasionally stalled out. However, that is a minor gripe in an otherwise incredible, epic, and emotional read. I know I’ll be picking up a finished copy for myself as soon as it hits the shelves!

(4.75 stars rounded up)

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Thanks to NetGalley and Crown Publishing for the ARC. At 600 pages, this is a thick book. The story spans over several decades. While it kind of stalled in the middle, the writing was phenomenal, and kept me going. I really wanted to find out how it ended. Fascinating characters, and just overall a great book. It's just a little long.

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All the Colors of the Dark by Chris Whittaker is an ARC from NetGalley. Crown Hardcover will be releasing this book on June 25,2024. Thank you NetGalley and Crown Hardcover Publishing for my ARC.

What a marvelous book starting from the first chapter the reader is captivated by the storyline. A young boy happens to save a classmate from being grabbed by a man driving a blue van. Instead the young boy is taken, left in darkness and befriended by a young girl, who is also a prisoner. Grace tells unlimited stories of things she knows or things she has heard of in her life. Grace helps Patch and herself survive through these stories. At one point, Patch tries to save them but is beaten for his trouble.

While all this is going on, Patch’s only friend is looking for him. Saint pesters the police chief with clues, that he mostly ignores. Saint comes up with her latest clue and follows the trail to the house where Patch and Grace are kept. Patch survives but where is Grace. The cops think he imagined Grace. Patch struggles with the changes in his life and begins to sketch and then paint a girl he never saw. Patch becomes obsessed with trying to paint Grace without ever seeing her in the darkness. All the colors of the dark is Patch trying to use different colors to make his Grace. He is tutored by the town’s drunken resident artist. Patch becomes obsessed with finding Grace and in doing so interviews and paints other missing girls. Saint becomes an FBI agent charged with finding Patch. He has started robbing banks and like Robin Hood gives almost all to the poor, and he sets off for his next missing girl. The FBI recognizes Patch’s art work publicizes missing girls in the world and how he has been able to save some from death. The FBI want Patch safe and not accidentally killed while robbing banks. Saint seems to always be a step behind.

This story has so many pieces expertly woven together that ties back to each other. Written so thoughtfully and thoroughly, so the reader feels a part of the story. The best novel I have read in 2024.

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Thank you to Crown Publishing and Netgalley for a copy of this ARC in exchange for my honest review.
I struggled with this one because it was not at all what I expected. At 41%, I had to ask myself if I was having fun and when I decided I wasn’t, I put it down for a few days. This book is longer than typical thriller/mystery books, and I had no idea what I had committed to before I started reading it.
I picked it back up a few days later, and I’m so glad I did. At 600+ pages, I had barely scratched the surface of this story, which spans over several decades. This is so much deeper than a standard “popcorn” thriller book, but it was well worth the investment. I will think about this story, the characters and their struggles for a very long time.
Don’t go into this like I did, expecting a short, binge worthy read- you will not get that at all. Instead, prepare for a lifelong journey about the depths of love and friendship and the strength it takes to overcome life’s unexpected traumas. Highly recommend!

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I have loved all of Chris Whitaker's books but this one is something special. May well be my favorite book of the year! Sad and gorgeous and wonderful.

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Books are magic.

Chris Whitaker is a magician.

It’s one of the most special stories I’ve ever read. Period. I don’t say that lightly. The way Whitaker writes is beautiful - the story is layered and intense in a way that makes you both unable to put it down but also wanting to cover your eyes to protect yourself from the next heartbreaking thing that will inevitably happen.

His character work is meticulous - every single one is broken in one way or another, but they still have heart & gumption. I may not have rooted for a group of characters as hard as this since Duchess Day Radley (Outlaw).

This one drops on June 25th - I’m begging you to pick it up. You have my 100% certified satisfaction guarantee.

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Such a beautiful book ! Definitely read this book. It's worth your time. So much heartache in one book!

It will break you and make you want to cry and keep going. Looking forward to more of this author’s work.

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I think this book is going to be a really big hit--potentially at the level of Crawdads- and will certainly be an easy sell at the shop. I personally loved his last book more but this one was good too,

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I’m not sure what I can say about this 608-page book. It’s obviously a big book that tells the story of Patch and Saint. They live in Montclair, Missouri, and both are outcasts.
Patch is 13 when he sees a man trying to abduct a girl, Misty. He stops it from happening, but the kidnapper disappears with Patch. The whole town has come to accept that Patch is dead. Every single person, except Saint, who refuses to give up her search.
I reread the description, and if I say much more about the plot, I’ll likely land in pirate filled waters. At first, the story captivated me, and then I hit a wall, and it seemed just too slow. I was smart enough to put it aside, and when I picked it back up, I was hooked once again. Sometimes you just read a very good book at the wrong time.
It’s a beautifully written story of loss, love, any events that can shape your life. Patch and Saint didn’t tug at my heart as much as Duchess (We Begin At The End) did, but the story came very close. 4.5 stars.

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Gorgeous. My language skills will be inadequate to express the beauty of the text. Although the author is from the UK, the novel reminds me of the best southern literature as it almost carries the reader through the lush fog of the narrative--the last line of every chapter a wallop. If you were annotating, you would be hard pressed to limit the lines underlined, and although so many can stand on their own, it is the exact construction that is magical. It isn't an easy or simple read; you won't find a traditional romance or a neatly wrapped mystery, but you will contemplate the layers of loyalty and trust that bind us together. And even though we are forced to confront the realities of grief and the darkness of humanity, we also learn that loving and being loved are worth the journey. (Insert magical author quote after publication.) Thank you to Crown/Penguin Random House and NetGalley for the advanced copy and the opportunity to share my review.

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Wow! I wasn't sure what to expect from this book, but it sure delivered. It's a study on the power of friendship and yet there is intrigue, mystery, missing girls and a serial killer. I could spend a lifetime with these characters and not get bored reading of their adventures and even their every day life. This will for sure be one of my top books of the year! It was long, but a fast read! Once you dive in you don't want to give up on the characters and so this book is one that you don't want to put down. I can't wait to recommend this book to all my friends.

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I think I have my favorite read of 2024 – it will be the book against all others are judged!! If anyone knows me, they know I was recommending We Begin At The End by Chris Whitakers for everyone’s 12 books in 12 months. And just as Dutchess, Thomas and Hal captured my heart then, Saint, Patch, Nix, oh and Sammy are embedded in my heart now.
Whitaker masterfully gives us a book that is thriller and mystery but also a profound love story. It is a deep dive into the characters, and so many special characters are brought to life in this book while taking the reader on a hunt for a serial killer. The book starts with trauma – an attempted abduction, a stabbing and a thirteen-year-old best friend that won’t give up believing in her pirate friend, and a police chief who shoulders the responsibility that this event under his watch forever has on these young teens.
The book spans decades and the impact that those early events had, not only on Misty, Patch and Saint, but on all of their family and the townspeople who knew them. But especially on the road it puts the three on and how their futures are re-written, and their lives continue to intertwine as they continue to circle around the ghost of a girl called Grace.
Whitaker weaves the events and issues of the past decades into their life stories, along with the sacrifices made by found family and that love is shown in many ways, but always having a remarkable impact.
This book wrecked me, had me in tears, made me gasp and filled me with promise and joy.

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Thank you @netgalley and @crownpublishing for this advance copy.
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I have already seen so many rave reviews for this title coming out in June from the author of We Begin at the End. I enjoyed the beginning and the ending, but I felt so bogged down through the middle. Some sections I was glued to the page, and other sections I wanted to skim through (many) pages. This could just be due to my personal aversion to long books. It was masterful story telling with wonderful characters in Saint & Patch, but I struggled with the 600+ pages.
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If you loved We Begin at the End, I think you will also love this one. All the Colors of the Dark publishes June 25th.

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Thank you NetGalley for the ARC. This long but actually felt shorter when reading it. It kept me engrossed the whole time. It is told from a dual narrative. Thirteen-year-old Patch, the pirate who saves a wealthy classmate from a serial killer and goes missing instead, and his best friend Saint, the beekeeper.

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All the Colors of the Dark is an epic story spanning decades that is a small town mystery, coming of age tale, serial killer thriller, and love story all rolled into one. That’s all I think you need to know - don’t read the jacket copy.

The first 100 pages of this have so. much. action. But know that will slow down and the book will feel a bit different. It then becomes much more about the characters and Saint and Patch are two of my favorite characters I’ve read in quite some time. It’s clear Chris Whitaker can write a likeable young person as these two were just as great as Duchess from We Begin at the End.

I wish I could say I loved this entirely and absolutely, but it wasn’t a five star read for me. Every single chapter, and there 261 of them, ends with a melodramatic one liner. These could have been more effective if used only when we needed a real gut punch. Some plot points also felt a bit cheap and commercially sad, but not deeply sad, if that makes any sense at all.

That being said, I liked this a whole lot. The chapters are quick and I couldn’t stop reading this book as I HAD to know the fates of our leads. The 600 pages flew. People are declaring this a likely favorite of the year and I get it!

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This is the kind of book that makes you forget others exist. All of the characters and the story and the writing are so well developed you look forward to spending time with them. It’s the kind of book that I woke up in the middle of the night thinking about and just jumped back into reading it. Definitely a top read of 2024 for me, possibly top read of all time. I will be telling everyone I know about this book and gifting it. Impossibly beautiful and enchanting and life changing. I’ve preorder my copy and I can’t wait yo hold
The physical copy in my hands and dive back into reading it! A masterpiece !!!’

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Thank you to NetGalley and Crown Publishing for the ARC of All the Colors of the Dark by Chris Whitaker in exchange for an honest review.

Wow. This has the circular gut punch power of John Irving's novels which I think is the highest compliment I can pay any book. I read the first 30% of the book over 2 nights, and on the 3rd night I couldn't put it down until the last page at 1am, and then I sat up for another 30 minutes crying trying to reflect on all that happened across the decades with Patch and Saint.

If We Begin at the End showed us one thing, it's that Whitaker can drop you into a story at any point and run the story in threads around you masterfully - so even when you think you know the story he will take you deeper into the characters and the subplots and all the machinations that set everything in its trajectory. He does the same here - within the first two chapters we are dropped into Patch being stabbed and disappeared after trying to save Misty, the wealthy town beauty, from a man attempting to assault and abduct her. The next 20% of the book his best friend, Saint, uses every possible resource available to a 13 year old brilliant girl in 1975 as she tries to find him against all odds.

As the decades move on from there, we grow with Patch and Saint and the townspeople and their families, through both the bad and the good. It's so hard to say much without spoiling any of the decades or the way the pieces fall together at the end, but Patch wears himself to nothing time and time again for those who have a lost girl nationwide, as Saint takes on a career trying to find the lost girls from the side of the law. Their lives are inextricably linked, even when they could not seem farther away from each other. The one girl haunting both of them, Grace, the one held with Patch, is the driving force, if she was not just a figment of Patch's tortured psyche being held in the dark for 307 days.

The story has so many elements for intrigue: mystery/missing person, serial killers, wisps of Shawshank Redemption esque motifs, bank heists, and more while also digging deeper into the way the 1970s shaped the cultural perception of religion, abortion, abducted kids, and domestic violence. Patch is fractured from his time in the dark and his life yo-yos in ways that are saddening, disheartening, cruel, hopeful, beautiful, and terrible - and all meant with his own interpretation of love. Saint narrows her own trajectory in life to save Patch and others - she is strong, fierce, and while legally she may at times be in the wrong, morally she is always in the right.

Seeing both characters and their loved ones and missing ones alter and change over the decades just sort of digs in how much we lose and gain in a lifetime. Whitaker also does an excellent job showing the sacrifices their parents and friends made in life that also had trickle down effects on Patch and Saint. Whitaker brilliantly shows the tiny happenstances that set off a butterfly effect through time in all its glory, and some of its sadness.

Just read it. Some spaces do have lulls, but don't get settled, stick with it through every decade, and then come to the last page and take some more time to think it through. There is so much in here that reminds us how to hope and dream and love and protect and try to be a better version of ourselves and how that impact can be a light to those we connect with, even if briefly.

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This is without a doubt the best book I’ve ever read. Ever. It had everything from pirates to best friends to serial killers to surprises. Lord it was good.

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Chris Whitaker is back after 3 years with a beautifully written mystery that turns the genre on its head. Set during 1979 in the small town of Monta Clare, Missouri, young girls are disappearing. The daughter of a wealthy family is targeted but an unlikely hero comes to her rescue, a poor troublesome boy from town named Patch. Not sure if he acted impetuously or heroically, Patch’s life and those that love him will be changed by this event in ways that reverberate for generations.

What unfolds is both a serial killer mystery and a touching love story. The author’s writing is beautifully scripted and transports the reader over the course of thirty years in this tragic small town. With a quick plot and writing that just keeps getting better with each book, Whitaker spins the mystery thriller into an epic heartfelt love story.

Thank you to Crown Publishing and NetGalley for the opportunity to review this title before its release.

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