![]() ![]() My only complaint about this book is Ware’s decision to jump back and forth in time like that. ![]() ![]() Slowly, we start to put the puzzle together of what happened that weekend, along with the protagonist. As the book progresses, we return to that hospital room every few chapters to learn another tiny piece of information while the story also unfolds in the glass house. So, before we even get into the woods, we know something bad is going to happen. ![]() Ware uses a common tactic in her plot development where she starts off the book in the future, with one character in the hospital, injured, and recently discovering that a murder investigation is taking place. What else makes this book freaky? The party attendees (four girls, one guy) all play with a Ouija board, and scare themselves silly when an unexpected message comes up. But of course, someone ends up dying, and there are drugs and alcohol involved, so it’s difficult to say who is really doing what. That alone is creepy right? They could have played board games the entire time and I still would have been nervous for them. The story is about a small, intimate bachlorette party taking place in completely glass house in the middle of the woods over a weekend. ![]()
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