Book Review: The Missing Girl by Jenny Quintana

The Missing GirlAbout the Book

When Anna Flores’ adored older sister goes missing as a teenager, Anna copes by disappearing too, just as soon as she can: running as far away from her family as possible, and eventually building a life for herself abroad.

Thirty years later, the death of her mother finally forces Anna to return home. Tasked with sorting through her mother’s possessions, she begins to confront not just her mother’s death, but also the huge hole Gabriella’s disappearance left in her life – and finds herself asking a question she’s not allowed herself to ask for years: what really happened to her sister?

With that question comes the revelation that her biggest fear isn’t discovering the worst; it’s never knowing the answer. But is it too late for Anna to uncover the truth about Gabriella’s disappearance?

Format: ebook (336 pp.)    Publisher: PanMacmillan/Mantle
Published: 18th December 2017    Genre:  Crime, Mystery, Thriller

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

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My Review

As well as attending several events at this year’s Henley Literary Festival (which runs from 29th September to 7th October), I wrote recently about how I’d been inspired to create a reading list of books by some of the authors appearing at the Festival.   The Missing Girl by Jenny Quintana is one of those books.

The Missing Girl is a compelling mystery but also an absorbing and believable depiction of a family coping with the disappearance of a child.  For me, this second element was the most rewarding part of the book.   As the mystery of Gabriella’s disappearance remains unresolved, it has a disturbing effect on the family.  Even more so coming as it does on top of overheard fragments of conversations and knowing glances between her father and mother the meaning of which twelve-year old Anna doesn’t understand at the time.   Anna mainly notices the hole Gabriella’s absence has left in their lives. ‘There was an emptiness, a stillness.  Gabriella had created sound.’

Alternating between two timelines – the present day and the 1980s – I thought the author did a particularly good job of recreating a sense of the earlier period.  A time when a bottle of Cinzano and a bowl of Twiglets marked a family celebration, Sunday lunch was a roast dinner (followed by roly-poly and custard if you were lucky) and a popular teenage hangout was the Our Price record shop.    I also liked the way the rather insular nature of a small village was conveyed and the spine-tingling feeling the author creates as young Anna undertakes her own investigation in the wooded outskirts of the village.

Given the sisters’ close relationship, I’ll admit I found it a little difficult to understand how Anna could have spent thirty years not wanting to find out more about Gabriella’s disappearance and Anna’s life in those intervening years doesn’t get much attention.  Nevertheless, the death of her mother does awaken Anna’s desire to know the truth – ‘Persistence, the need to know, creeping back after all those years away’ – and, luckily for her, some of the key witnesses from the time are still around.

The Missing Girl is an accomplished debut which I really enjoyed for the author’s deft handling of the dual timelines and its multi-layered story.   The author lays down plenty of tempting false trails for the reader to follow and although I (sort of) guessed one of the key twists in the book before it was revealed it didn’t spoil my enjoyment of what followed.  The solution to the mystery of Gabriella’s disappearance – sorry, not going to say!  However, I’ll admit the author wrong-footed me.

Jenny Quintana is appearing at Henley Literary Festival on 30th September 2018 (tickets still available as at time of writing)

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In three words: Atmospheric, unsettling, mystery

Try something similar…Reservoir 13 by Jon McGregor (read my spoiler free review here)


Jenny Quintana, author.About the Author

Jenny Quintana grew up in Essex and Berkshire, before studying English Literature in London. She has taught in London, Seville and Athens and has also written books for teaching English as a foreign language. She is a graduate of the Curtis Brown Creative writing course.  She now lives with her family in Berkshire. The Missing Girl is her first novel.                                      (Photo credit: Alicia Clarke)

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Blog Tour/Book Review: The Psychology of Time Travel by Kate Mascarenhas

I’m thrilled to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for The Psychology of Time Travel by Kate Mascarenhas.  Thanks to Blake at Head of Zeus for inviting me to join the tour, Florence for doing  the organising and Kate for my personally inscribed proof copy of her book. Check out the tour banner at the bottom of this post to see the other great book bloggers taking part in the tour.

Watch the book trailer for The Psychology of Time Travel here


The Psychology of Time TravelAbout the Book

1967: Four female scientists invent a time-travel machine. They are on the cusp of fame: the pioneers who opened the world to new possibilities. But then one of them suffers a breakdown and puts the whole project in peril.

2017: Ruby knows her beloved Granny Bee was a pioneer, but they never talk about the past. Though time travel is now big business, Bee has never been part of it. Then they receive a message from the future–a newspaper clipping reporting the mysterious death of an elderly lady.

2018: When Odette discovered the body, she went into shock. Blood everywhere, bullet wounds, flesh. But when the inquest fails to answer any of her questions, Odette is frustrated. Who is this dead woman that haunts her dreams? And why is everyone determined to cover up her murder?

Format: Hardcover, ebook (368 pp.)    Publisher: Head of Zeus
Published: 9th August 2018                    Genre: Literary Fiction, Mystery

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find The Psychology of Time Travel on Goodreads


My Review

At one point in the novel, one of the characters observes that a characteristic of more experienced time travellers is that they generally have ‘a weird hippocampus’.  Having now read the book, I feel I can definitely identify with this – and goodness knows what the author’s hippocampus looks like!  As it happens, during the time I was reading the book I had to undergo an MRI brain scan.  In my imagination, the radiographer is now looking at the scan and thinking, WTF…

There are so many intersecting story lines and switches of time period in The Psychology of Time Travel that I can’t imagine how the author kept track of everything.  I picture her surrounded by post-it notes, whiteboards, flowcharts… The Psychology of Time Travel is definitely a contender for a ‘read-in-one-sitting’ book.  Once you pick it up, you may just decide to cancel all your plans for that morning, afternoon or evening.  In fact, to save you the trouble of making the decision, I took a quick trip to the future myself and I can reassure you that reading the book will turn out to be much more satisfying that what you intended doing anyway.  And, by the way, Jaroslav says ‘Hi’.  Oh, I forget, you haven’t met him yet, have you?  Plus that new recipe you were planning to try later?  Don’t bother; it doesn’t work out too well.

The Psychology of Time Travel SignedI said earlier that my proof copy was personally inscribed by the author (see picture).  I had the uncanny sense when I finished the book that if I turned back to that page it would now read ‘Glad you enjoyed it!’.

A sort of modern day version, for grown-ups, of John Masefield’s The Box of Delights, Kate Mascarenhas’ debut novel is a clever, funny, exhilarating, mind-bending mystery that deserves all the rave reviews it is getting.   This is an author to look out for in the future.  (See what I did there?)

I received a review copy courtesy of publishers, Head of Zeus, in return for an honest and unbiased review.

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In three words: Original, imaginative, compelling

Try something similar…Dark Matter by Blake Crouch


Kate Mascarenhas Photo Credit Matt Murtagh

About the Author

Kate Mascarenhas is a half-Irish, half-Seychellois midlander. She is a qualified child psychologist, dabbling in doll-making and bookbinding in her free time. She lives with her husband in a small terraced house, which she is slowly filling with Sindy dolls.  The Psychology of Time Travel is her first novel.

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