Samadrita's Reviews > In the Woods
In the Woods (Dublin Murder Squad, #1)
by
by
Samadrita's review
bookshelves: european-literature, by-women-who-matter, ireland, suspense-thrillers, mystery-detective, crime-noir, amazing-characterization, disturbia, cherished, melancholia, re-readable
Jul 15, 2013
bookshelves: european-literature, by-women-who-matter, ireland, suspense-thrillers, mystery-detective, crime-noir, amazing-characterization, disturbia, cherished, melancholia, re-readable
It's been a while since I have read a book that has left me so utterly devastated, a book entailing such a profound emotional investment that having finished it I feel a gaping emptiness within, a sense of loss. It feels like my heart has been simultaneously crushed into pulp under the weight of the tragedies that descend on the lives of a handful of characters and blown to smithereens. And I would never be able to pick up the pieces and glue them back together into a throbbing whole again.
I read In the Woods while on vacation, whenever I took breaks from watching wave after wave crash on to the shore with the familiar rip-roaring intensity of the sea. I read this even when I was too tired to stay up till late, lying on an unfamiliar bed with a sheet of dubious hygiene standards. I read this during prolonged car rides. And every time I had to tear my eyes away from its pages, I felt a pang of irritation.
As I made my way toward the bone-chilling climax of this narrative, awake at an unholy hour, I distinctly remember breaking out in a sweat on a cool December night to boot. Sleep became an alien entity and, come hell or high water, I knew I would not wrench myself away from this fantastic make-believe world of a small town and the sinister occurrences that tied the lives of its residents in the most twisted way possible. I longed to stay trapped in the eerie magic spell cast by the woods, under the ominous shadows of leafy canopies of pine and beech, caught up in a hazy daydream playing hide and seek with Peter, Jamie and Adam. My heart ached for the two children who never returned home from their beloved woods, who were never found again and the way the tragedy of their mystifying disappearance dealt a crushing blow to the life of their traumatized playmate who returned unharmed. It wept for Rob and Cassie and their missed chances.
This book isn't about crime and punishment, it isn't about the science of deduction or smooth-talking, fedora-sporting detectives smartly arriving at inference after inference and nabbing the culprit in style. I almost crave for the standardized simplicity of regular crime thrillers at this moment, the stories which conveniently compartmentalize the crime and the police procedure, the good guys and the bad guys. At least a book like that would not have left me feeling so desolate and bereft of any happy feeling.
But this book took my breath away with its ability to instill so much life in each one of its characters that their distress became my own, with its ornate but never ostentatious prose and the way it deftly narrated a story infused with the dull shades of a sadness so affecting. Tana French foregoes all the spick and span categorizations here, thumbs her nose at the usual pigeon-holing. Instead with consummate skill, she outlines the faint traces of humanity in the most brutal impulses, acknowledges the messed up ways in which this bizarre drama of life plays out and how a neat tying up of all loose ends seldom happens in reality. Sometimes, life is that merciless and cold.
This book is about the labyrinthine pathways of our mind which treacherously conceal our most terrifying memories and how our subconscious prods us to replace the unpleasant truths with self-justifying falsities and even establishes our faith in them. It is about the seemingly innocuous, small cruelties of mundane everyday life that are capable of triggering much bigger disasters that destroy the lives of children and the unforgivable cruelties oblivious, ignorant children are themselves capable of.
I refuse to label this electrifying debut novel mere crime fiction because, in all earnestness, it is not. Rather, it is literature which delves deep into the causality of crime and meticulously brings out the humanity of all the people involved, literature capable of wringing out empathy from even the least sensitive reader. And it is an exploration of the convoluted workings of the human mind, of evil and barbaric urges lurking somewhere in its darkest nooks and crevices. It is a cerebral suspense thriller and, without a doubt, one of the best I have ever read. But it is also a beautiful, bittersweet story about people who carry on with their broken lives shouldering the unbearable burden of past trauma, an unforgettable human drama which left me emotionally drained, agitated to the extreme and yet gasping for more.
I read In the Woods while on vacation, whenever I took breaks from watching wave after wave crash on to the shore with the familiar rip-roaring intensity of the sea. I read this even when I was too tired to stay up till late, lying on an unfamiliar bed with a sheet of dubious hygiene standards. I read this during prolonged car rides. And every time I had to tear my eyes away from its pages, I felt a pang of irritation.
As I made my way toward the bone-chilling climax of this narrative, awake at an unholy hour, I distinctly remember breaking out in a sweat on a cool December night to boot. Sleep became an alien entity and, come hell or high water, I knew I would not wrench myself away from this fantastic make-believe world of a small town and the sinister occurrences that tied the lives of its residents in the most twisted way possible. I longed to stay trapped in the eerie magic spell cast by the woods, under the ominous shadows of leafy canopies of pine and beech, caught up in a hazy daydream playing hide and seek with Peter, Jamie and Adam. My heart ached for the two children who never returned home from their beloved woods, who were never found again and the way the tragedy of their mystifying disappearance dealt a crushing blow to the life of their traumatized playmate who returned unharmed. It wept for Rob and Cassie and their missed chances.
This book isn't about crime and punishment, it isn't about the science of deduction or smooth-talking, fedora-sporting detectives smartly arriving at inference after inference and nabbing the culprit in style. I almost crave for the standardized simplicity of regular crime thrillers at this moment, the stories which conveniently compartmentalize the crime and the police procedure, the good guys and the bad guys. At least a book like that would not have left me feeling so desolate and bereft of any happy feeling.
But this book took my breath away with its ability to instill so much life in each one of its characters that their distress became my own, with its ornate but never ostentatious prose and the way it deftly narrated a story infused with the dull shades of a sadness so affecting. Tana French foregoes all the spick and span categorizations here, thumbs her nose at the usual pigeon-holing. Instead with consummate skill, she outlines the faint traces of humanity in the most brutal impulses, acknowledges the messed up ways in which this bizarre drama of life plays out and how a neat tying up of all loose ends seldom happens in reality. Sometimes, life is that merciless and cold.
This book is about the labyrinthine pathways of our mind which treacherously conceal our most terrifying memories and how our subconscious prods us to replace the unpleasant truths with self-justifying falsities and even establishes our faith in them. It is about the seemingly innocuous, small cruelties of mundane everyday life that are capable of triggering much bigger disasters that destroy the lives of children and the unforgivable cruelties oblivious, ignorant children are themselves capable of.
I refuse to label this electrifying debut novel mere crime fiction because, in all earnestness, it is not. Rather, it is literature which delves deep into the causality of crime and meticulously brings out the humanity of all the people involved, literature capable of wringing out empathy from even the least sensitive reader. And it is an exploration of the convoluted workings of the human mind, of evil and barbaric urges lurking somewhere in its darkest nooks and crevices. It is a cerebral suspense thriller and, without a doubt, one of the best I have ever read. But it is also a beautiful, bittersweet story about people who carry on with their broken lives shouldering the unbearable burden of past trauma, an unforgettable human drama which left me emotionally drained, agitated to the extreme and yet gasping for more.
Sign into Goodreads to see if any of your friends have read
In the Woods.
Sign In »
Reading Progress
July 15, 2013
– Shelved as:
to-read
July 15, 2013
– Shelved
July 15, 2013
– Shelved as:
someday-surely
July 15, 2013
– Shelved as:
european-literature
July 15, 2013
– Shelved as:
by-women-who-matter
July 15, 2013
– Shelved as:
ireland
July 15, 2013
– Shelved as:
suspense-thrillers
July 15, 2013
– Shelved as:
mystery-detective
November 23, 2013
–
Started Reading
November 23, 2013
– Shelved as:
crime-noir
November 23, 2013
–
4.69%
""I worry that I might come out of hypnosis with that sugar-high glaze of self-satisfied enlightenment, like a seventeen-year-old who's just discovered Kerouac, and start proselytizing strangers in pubs."
Ooh I love Tana French already. <3"
page
21
Ooh I love Tana French already. <3"
December 2, 2013
– Shelved as:
amazing-characterization
December 2, 2013
–
Finished Reading
December 3, 2013
– Shelved as:
disturbia
December 3, 2013
– Shelved as:
cherished
December 3, 2013
– Shelved as:
melancholia
December 8, 2013
– Shelved as:
re-readable
Comments Showing 1-41 of 41 (41 new)
date
newest »
message 1:
by
Jill
(new)
-
rated it 5 stars
Jul 15, 2013 02:15PM
reply
|
flag
And, brilliant review, as usual.
Now onto The Likeness! (my favorite)
Diane, if I could I'd go on a rampage recommending this book to every one of my closest GR friends. But I am hoping my review will make at least a few add it to their tbr shelves. This is a brilliantly written book and I think it is right up your alley.
I have a hunch you will love it, Garima. I am not much of a crime fiction reader either (at least not anymore) but lately I have taken to reading a few much-talked-about writers who have given a new twist to the traditional crime thriller. I would greatly encourage you to pick this up next year. And another bonus is Tana French's lyrical writing.
This is the perfect book to get acquainted with the genre although regular crime thrillers are much too different from the kind of stuff Tana French writes. I feel I haven't been able to do justice to the way this book captured my attention and held it till the end. And I guarantee your heart will go out to the characters and their dilemmas. Thank you for reading. :)
She is amazing. And a thank you to both you and Scarlet who fueled my interest in the series. You bet I will end up reading the 3 remaining books soon enough. I heard from Caroline that a movie is coming out. I hope it remains faithful to the book.
I loved this:
This book is about the labyrinthine pathways of our mind which treacherously conceal our most terrifying memories and how our subconscious prods us to replace the unpleasant truths with self-justifying falsities and even establishes our faith in them.
Stellar reviewing, as ever! I love the way you described the effect reading it had on you. This looks like one to read as soon as I can get my hands on it.
I loved this:
This book is about..."
The subtitle ticked me off to, that is until I discovered what a gem this was. I couldn't help but give it 5 stars, seeing that there's no way Tana French could've made it any better. And her writing is excellent too. Thanks for reading, Kall.
It's honestly a great book even if you take out the crime solving from the picture. Very well written in addition. I hope you enjoy reading, Juan.
And I am so happy you added it, Lauren. It would intrigue, depress, shock and terrify you at the same time. Tana French's writing is not to be missed.
Thank you for reading, Tej and your ever insightful comment. This book deals in child murders and a good majority of the events hover on the issue of child psychology. I am happy to see you adding it to your tbr and hope you enjoy reading just as much as I did.
I thought I should use the formal recommendation system just this once. I am really eager to see your own reaction to this book when you read it. Pick it up when you are looking for something relatively lighter (although it definitely cannot be categorized happy stuff). Thank you lovely Dolors for all the wonderful things you say all the time. Your encouraging words are like sunshine on this dreary December morning.
Haha actually I wanted to bring something relatively lighter with me on vacation not any heavy reading material. Surprisingly it turned out, this wasn't the light reading I thought it to be. But I enjoyed every moment of reading this.
That's good to hear. I plan on reading the entire series and hopefully everything that Tana French writes in the future.
This book did have its share of flaws - one or two issues with the way Detective Ryan didn't suspect the killer despite obvious clues and the significant slowing down of the pace in the middle. But something about it just hit me in the gut with the force of a meteorite. I hope to read the entire series soon.
You will find flaws in each of the books she's written, but it's interesting how she draws the reader in despite these flaws. I think it's through insightful storytelling with multiple story lines.
I meant to mention how much I loved your eloquent review! I shared it with a friend who loved the next 3 Tana F books, but had heard this one was not good so is not planning to read it. I'm encouraging her to check this one out - it's quite a ride.
Oh no that's sad to hear she doesn't want to read this. I think this is a perfect beginning to the series since it grabs attention right away. I'd love to see Rob Ryan coming back later on in the series because the way this book ends for him is truly depressing. And I am glad you liked my review enough to share it with a friend. Thank you!
(view spoiler)
(view spoiler)
Haha I knew you would approve. I also loved The Likeness but a little less than this one.
*heartbreak* Glad you like the review though, Aga.
Glad you liked the review, Hershey. I hope the book affects you in the same manner it affected me.