Member Reviews
I did not finish this book. I probably should have given it more of a chance, but I had to quit in chapter three when the nurse/doctor had her hand inside Lauren to try to stop her postpartum hemorrhage and ripped her episiotomy stitches. I know the book will go beyond Lauren's time in the hospital, but reading about newborns is not always good for me. I had the feeling that this was going to be one of those books where you wonder for most of the book if the person is crazy or it's really happening, and the thought of reading about someone else's potential postpartum depression (or psychosis) being turned into a horror story was too much for me. I'm not sure why I wanted to read this in the first place, and rather than there being anything wrong with the book, it's just not something I'm comfortable with. I will not rate this book anywhere else since I did not finish it.
Thank you net galley for this opportunity to read Little Darlings!!
What would you do, if your child was kidnapped and returned safely back to you, but only problem is that you child is not...your child??
I totally enjoyed Little darlings dark atmosphere and grimm fairytale theme. Dark twisted psycholigical thriller!! Will keep you up at edge of seat!!
Quite creepy and you start wondering how sane Lauren really is.
If ever there was a character you wanted to punch, it would be Patrick Tranter. He got on my nerves from the very start.
As a new mother of twins, Lauren is bound to have some postpartum depression and anxiety, but how much of what she experiences is in her head?
A strange hospital visit, a weird book, a creepy baby gift, it’s a wonder I didn’t go crazy reading this story.
Little Darlings was an eerily creepy yet addictive debut book that left me turning the pages and wondering what was real and what was not. It's a daring book that combines a dark element along with realistic life , which made for a very entertaining and haunting story.
Lauren gives birth to twin boys and soon after is visited in the hospital by a woman that claims she will steal her babies and exchange them for hers and no one will know. This changes everything about Lauren and the way she deals with life. She is exhausted (which as a mother, we can feel for her). She gets no sleep, is basically raising her children without the help of her husband and she won't leave her house for fear that the woman will hold her actions. Yet in all of this, not one person believes her. Until the detective Jo Harper steps in and just feels something is off. Even when she is told to stop working on the case that never started because it was "open and closed" with no evidence helping Lauren's claims. She just trusts her gut and dives deeper to find some truth.
The story is a bit twisted and reads like a Grimm fairy tale told in more detail. It even has quotes from some darker fairy tales. And then we get the history of the small town they reside in and events that lead to some creepy 'folklore'.
What is truth? What is fiction? What is real? What is a figment of your exhausted imagination? And what will you do to keep your children alive? It was a crazy ride and I felt for Lauren all throughout the book. Could this woman be crazy? Unreliable protagonists are always fun to read, but this hit on a whole other level. It was unsettling and full of emotions that new mothers deal with regularly. The book was put together quite well and I would totally recommend it for someone that isn't afraid to go a little dark and almost fearful.
I was still thinking about it when I finished and applaud Ms Golding for her fantastic debut. 4 + stars!
#netgalley #LittleDarlings
Great read! It was very suspenseful, and I could never imagine being in that position. I definitely recommend!
“Little Darlings” is a combination of a psychological thriller and a supernatural horror novel. The story is told in the third person, alternating between Lauren’s point-of-view and the point-of-view of DS Jo Harper who investigates various incidents involving Lauren. It is a unique, haunting story that stays with you long after finishing it.
Lauren has just given birth to twin boys Riley and Morgan. She had a difficult delivery and her husband, Patrick, isn’t helpful. Patrick is unlikable from the beginning and does nothing to help Lauren’s fragile state. The reader doesn’t know if someone really tried to abduct Lauren’s sons or if it’s just a hallucination of a sleep-deprived, mentally ill woman. DS Harper is at least willing to look into the situation. Her investigation adds a large dose of reality to this otherwise supernatural story of Lauren being convinced someone is out to take her babies and replace them with “changelings”. The details of Jo’s investigation, along with folklore about changelings at the beginnings of the chapters make Lauren’s situation seem even creepier.
I don’t want to say too much more so I don’t spoil the suspense of the story. The book is strange and creepy, and I was surprised at how much I liked it. Once I started reading it, I didn’t want to put it down. It could have been a five-star book for me, but I didn’t care for the ambiguous ending. I’m okay with the question of whether or not Lauren was mentally disturbed or if there really was a supernatural being involved. However, I didn’t like that the book seemed to end abruptly without letting us know what Patrick’s agenda was and how things eventually turn out for Lauren. Although I was disappointed in the ending, I still enjoyed this unusual thriller.
Thanks to Netgalley and Crooked Lane Books for a copy of the eARC in exchange for a fair review.
Lauren has recently given birth to her twins, but when she wakes in the hospital one night to a young women trying to take her twins she is terrified. But when no one is found everyone thinks she is crazy. Lauren is feeling so overwhelmed and losing a lot of sleep so she thinks maybe they are right. Maybe she is just imagining it all.
When she comes home with Patrick she still feels like she is drowning and can't catch a breath, but after a fight with Patrick as she steps outside to get away from him she sees the woman again. Lauren knows that she can't leave the babies alone, especially after her friend Cyndi comes over and reads part of the story about a set of twins changed.
As the weeks go by and Lauren refuses to leave the house, and Patrick is sleeping in another room, she begins to feel like maybe that all was part of her imagination until the day she finally goes out with the twins and accidentally falls asleep at the park. When she wakes the babies are gone.
When I started reading this I was wondering what I picked up... I mean it was one where the title caught my attention and I didn't read the synopsis so I went in blind. As I kept reading I was still wondering what was going on. It totally made me think of that movie with Angelina Jolie, Changeling. I was really wondering if she was crazy or what, but the whole time DI Harper is investigating and finding things that support Lauren so I still wondered what was going to happen.
I really wasn't expecting that aspect of fantasy mixed in with the normal every day world. It was brilliant and I devoured this book. I couldn't stop reading it. I wanted more.
A creepy, unsettling book that won’t give you any easy answers and will make you think. Lauren just had twins. She is so exhausted and sleep-deprived that she may have started seeing things. The fact that her husband is a selfish b@stard doesn’t help. A scary woman tells her how she’s going to take her babies and replace them with her creatures. After the twins disappear for an hour and are returned, they seem… changed. Not to worry though, all she needs to do is take these changelings back into the water and she’ll get her sons back. Now, imagine being in that situation… if she’s wrong, she is making a big mistake. Jo Harper is a police officer who tends to break the rules. She has a hunch about that call from an unbalanced young mother that everyone thinks is insane. Even after she’s told to leave it alone, she just can’t stop. I was so engrossed by the story, even if I didn’t know what was going to happen. Is there a real supernatural element? Does everything have a reasonable explanation? Is Lauren crazy? The writing is great and the characters complex. A five-star read.
I chose to read this book and all opinions in this review are my own and completely unbiased. Thank you, NetGalley/ Crooked Lane Books!
Wow! This story kept me completely engaged until the very end. Nice blend for a contemporary fairy tale. I had to research the London slang a bit but that made the story feel authentic.
Thanks to NetGalley and publishers for the advanced reader’s copy of the book in exchange for my honest review.
Lauren has just given birth to twin boys Morgan and Riley, and while there isn't that insta-love that all the books talk about, she does grow to love them, immensely. Alone in the hospital with her boys, Lauren sees a vicious woman who threatens to take her boys, to steal them and replace them with look-a-likes. While she did everything she could, no one is taking her concerns seriously. Her anxiousness is made worse when she discovers someone had given her a folklore book that centers around mothers and their twin children.
Lauren is a good mother but her job is made much harder in the fact she is essentially doing it all on her own. Her husband, claiming the need for sleep because of how often he works has chosen to "tap" out of child-rearing and even Lauren says "...there'd been signs that he wasn't a natural caregiver". If only she could get some sleep, her days would be easier. If only her husband would help, she would be able to manage. If only...
But Lauren's fears are getting worse. Someone has been watching her, someone has been at her window, looking in at her and her boys. Unable to leave the house for fear that the woman will steal her sons, her husband is getting impatient with her. He's shooed off the Jo, the officer who was trying to help Lauren and she feels even more alone. After her husbands urging, she finally does get out for a walk only for it to turn horribly wrong. The boys are missing and her worst fears have come true.
Little Darlings is infused with lore from a multitude of places. A new mother reading such stories would be horrified so it helps to express Lauren's fear of the children being replaced. Her husband Patrick was awful. He was selfish and sneaky, only caring for his sons when it suited him. He treated Lauren like dirt and I kept hoping she would leave him. I appreciated Jo's persistence in helping Lauren and found myself incredibly frustrated with the police department who would not take Jo seriously. My frustration at some characters is a great example of how well Golding wrote those characters.
While I felt I had some inkling of what was going on, Golding added a few surprises that were a nice mix. New moms don't have it easy, and a lot of them suffer from postpartum and Golding did a great job at hinting the possibility without saying it. I felt for Lauren who wanted nothing more than protect her sons. Little Darlings was a well-written, easy and quick read, with suspense and a hint of fantasy in the lore she used. An enjoyable read.
Okay, creepy is the closest descriptive word you can use for this book, but it's so very well written that even the creepy parts are outstanding. I found myself reading through my fingers like I could not see what was coming next. But it would be a shame to not keep reading. A mother's instinct tells her that something is different about her twins, but is it really? Is her husband part of the switch? Melanie Golding has done an excellent job of writing a mystery that crosses over into horror very quickly but never loses sight of the mother's fight to see her children brought back to her. Love, love, loved it!!!
I was unable to finish this book. It was painstakingly slow. I couldn't focus on it. It didn't hold my attention at all. I am sure there will be many out there that will enjoy it. It wasn't for me.
This was creepy in the best possible way. I love a good thriller and I love a dark fairy tale. This book has the best of both worlds. I tore through this sinister tale in no time!
Lauren Tranter is exhausted. She's given birth to twin baby boys, Morgan and Riley, and suffered a postpartum hemorrhage. She has barely slept (thanks to the hospital's lame rule that doesn't allow fathers to stay overnight), her nipples are raw and cracked from breastfeeding, and she's beginning to worry.
"She was still waiting for the rush of love. That one you feel, all at once the second they're born, like nothing you've ever experienced before. The rush of love that people with children always go on about. She'd been looking forward to it. It worried her that she hadn't felt it yet." *
From the other side of the curtain in the maternity ward in the early morning hours, a woman is singing a creepy song. When Lauren asks her to stop, the young woman explains that she too has twin babies, though hers are cursed.
"'Let's deal,' hissed the horrible woman, bringing her face up close to Lauren. 'What's fair, after all? We had everything taken, you had everything given. Let's change one for another.'" *
This is when Lauren finally feels that rush of love; she will do everything in her power to keep her boys from harm. As the woman continues her raving, Lauren escapes with Morgan and Riley to the locked hospital bathroom and calls for help.
"'Choose one,' said the woman, 'choose one or I'll take them both. I'll take yours and you can have mine. You'll never know the difference. I can make sure they look just the same. One's fair. Two is justice done.'" *
When hospital security respond to her call, they find no evidence that a stranger gained access to the locked ward and cancel the police assistance.
Detective Sergeant Jo Harper sits down the following morning at her desk and scans the calls from night shift. She's intrigued by the call and though police assistance had been cancelled she decides to visit the hospital to follow up anyway.
Hospital staff have decided that Lauren's exhaustion caused a hallucination of the terrifying woman. When Harper asks Lauren what she believes, she says that she isn't sure she can trust her thoughts.
Once Lauren is safely home with the boys, they begin to settle in. The problem is that her husband Patrick is a grade-A asshole. He decides that both of them shouldn't lose sleep at night so he sets himself up in the spare bedroom. His logic is that if he sleeps well at night he'll be better able to help during the day. Also, Lauren should really get used to taking care of the boys alone since he'll be returning to work. (I have so much to say about this but for the sake of this review, lets just all agree Patrick is an asshole.)
Though struggling through sleep deprivation and anxiety over the horrible scene at the hospital, Lauren finds herself in the newborn stage where time loses all meaning; days pass in the blink of an eye and yet you live hours in a span of five minutes.
When she finally works up the nerve to leave the house with Morgan and Riley after weeks indoors, her worst fear is realized when she falls asleep on a park bench by the river and wakes to find the stroller she'd parked next to her is missing.
The police are immediately called in, DS Harper is on scene searching the riverbank where she's spotted tire tracks thought to be from the stroller going into the water. Several minutes later Harper finds a woman down the trail and it appears she's pushing the stroller into the water.
The woman is arrested and the situation looks even worse when it becomes obvious she'd been having an affair with Patrick (remember what I said: asshole). It seems to Harper that this woman had obvious motive to stalk Lauren and abduct the twins.
When the boys are brought back to Lauren, she's inconsolable. They are not her boys. The evil woman had taken her boys are replaced them with her own. She remembers a story about changelings from a book called Twin Tales. The only way to get her boys back is to throw the changelings into the river. Grabbing the stroller, Lauren runs for the river.
Now Lauren is placed on a mental health hold that lasts three days. She realizes people will think that she's crazy if she tries to explain that the real Morgan and Riley have been stolen away. She has no choice but to find a way out of the facility and back to the river where she can exchange the changelings for her own.
Little Darlings really messed with my emotions. I remembered all too well those exhausting days with a newborn: all the worries, exhaustion, overwhelming love and fear, the time warp of sleep deprivation, the emotional rollercoaster and of course trying to both mentally and physically recover from childbirth.
I rooted for Lauren as the story unfolded, knowing how easy it is to feel like you've lost touch with reality in those first weeks after birth. I was mad at myself when I began to doubt her! That final scene gave me all the feels and made me wonder if we'll get a second book -- but don't worry, it's not a cliffhanger!
I loved that this psychological thriller was inspired by the folklore about changelings; it's not only creepy but also preys on a mother's worst fear, making the main character extremely relatable for me.
I liked the small bit of history we receive on DS Jo Harper, it gave me a better understanding of her persistence on the case. My biggest complaint is that the history of the creepy woman and her twin boys was explained at the very end of the book and it was really only a brief mention. There was potential for some great detail and back story that would've taken this book to the next level in my humble opinion.
Thanks to Crooked Lane Books and NetGalley for providing me with an ARC in exchange for my honest review. Little Darlings is scheduled for release on April 30, 2019.
*The quotes included are from an advance readers copy and are subject to change upon final publication.
Honestly wasn't sure what I would think about it so I went into it with an open mind well-written well-executed not sure if I would run out and buy it but I'm glad I read it
Short review: for me, this book had a slow climb to a disappointing climax, and flat ending. I was disappointed with the blah ending. I was really just waiting for something majorly OMG to happen, and it just didn't. I was interested, but not engrossed. I put it down a lot in order to read something else.
Netgalley ebook.
Lauren is exhausted after giving birth to twin boys Morgan and Riley. Awakened by strange singing and babies cooing from the bed next to her, she investigates in hopes that she would find another new mother to twins. Instead, a ghastly woman in rags holding faceless bundles greets her. The woman demands that they exchange twins, to which Lauren pulls her twins to safety and makes an emergency call for help. When hospital security responds, Lauren is found alone with her twins and no sign of the mysterious woman. Her husband and doctors think she’s over tired and imagining things.
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Her first month home with them is spent on guard, convinced that this woman will show up and switch her beautiful boys out with something not quite human. After meeting up with friends in a park, Lauren accidentally nods off on a bench and wakes up to find her babies missing. In a frantic search involving the police, Morgan and Riley are found. One look at them and Lauren knows that these aren’t her children. Something has replaced them and she needs to get them back.
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Littered with fairytale and changeling references, Little Darlings is a fantastical thriller. I loved the unreliability of Lauren’s point of view. I especially love thriller/horror stories centered around women who are pregnant or new mothers. The terror that something is wrong with your baby and no one believes you because they think you are being overly emotional is horrifying to me!
The first four and a half chapters of this book were a chore to get through. There is way too much detail about birth included (and this is from someone who has had two children). I almost abandoned it completely but instead I pushed myself to keep reading as the book description was so enticing. In the end it was an okay story, missing to me were elements of the dark fairy tales as described. I suppose I thought this book was going to be much more spooky and sinister and it just fell a little flat for me.
Lauren Tranter, exhausted after the difficult birth of twin boys is lying in her hospital bed when she thinks she sees and hears a dirty, dishevelled woman try to swap one of her babies for one of Lauren's boys. However, the the police and the hospital can't find any evidence of an intruder, so she is forced to believe that she has imagined the woman but is nevertheless relieved to take her boys home where she can keep them safe.
Once at home, with little help from her selfish husband, Lauren becomes even more exhausted, so that when she does finally get out of the house to meet some friends when the babies are four weeks old, she falls asleep sitting on a park bench and the babies are snatched from her side. Although safely found, Lauren becomes convinced that they are not her babies but changelings and so begins a nightmare for Lauren trying to convince those around her that she needs to get her boys back.
Melanie Golding's debut thriller is sinister and creepy and demands to be read quickly to find out whether Lauren is a psychotic new mother or the victim of an evil faery plot. The writing and pacing of the plot were excellent, although I think the creep factor could have been ramped up a bit more, especially during Lauren's sightings and interactions with the faery woman for a bit more tension. Lauren and police sergeant Jo Harper are well developed characters. Ms Golding really painted an excellent picture of what sleep deprivation can do to a new mother (especially one with twins and an unengaged husband) and Jo with her intuition is the just the sort of policewoman you'd want on your side when facing the rest of the world. I didn't care much for Amy, the journalist and thought she was a bit too flaky for someone like Jo to like and trust (and I really would have liked to see Lauren's husband suffer more for his neglect of his wife and twins!). Overall, an enjoyable thriller with a sprinkling of fairy tales and the supernatural to give it an unusual twist.
If you like a creepy mystery, and Melanie Goldin’s debut novel Little Darlings has not come to your attention yet, then I strongly advise you to put it on your reading list right now! There is nothing better than an urban myth to give a mystery that extra scary touch, and Goldin has gone one step further and has found various old legend to back up her story. This creepy story had me utterly captivated, and even after finishing it I could not shake off a slight feeling of unease that lingered in my room. Aren’t those the mysteries of the best kind?
A young mother calls emergency services from the maternity ward of the local hospital claiming that someone had tried to steal her newborn twins, but noone believes her. A few weeks later, her babies go missing for a short period of time when their sleep deprived mother briefly nods off on a park bench whilst out walking. They are quickly located, but their mother is convinced that these are not her babies. Everyone thinks she is crazy, but is she?
I love mysteries where it is never clear if the MC is in fact a bit crazy, imagining all the creepy things that are going on, or if there is indeed something sinister at play. Little Darlings messed with my mind in the best possible way. Yes, there is a certain supernatural element that may seem far-fetched to some readers, but I found it utterly compelling. Especially the premise that Lauren is convinced her babies are in danger, but everyone thinks she is crazy. Imagine how terrifying and frustrating this must be! I still vividly remember the constant fog of tiredness I operated under after the birth of my first child, and how after weeks of sleep deprivation my mind started playing tricks on me. So is Lauren really just a bit paranoid? Her story does seem a bit far fetched ...
Goldin knows how to plant a seed of doubt in the reader’s mind very early on, which resulted in a constant sense of menace and danger that made me snuggle deep under my covers and jump at every noise in the darkness out there. The chapter introductions, featuring some old legends and urban myths, only served to ratchet up tension as they lent an aura of mysticism to the story. I still remember sitting in my grandma’s kitchen as a child whilst the old women talked about such things. Perhaps this is why this story evoked such primal terror in me. Whatever it was, it really worked, and I am putting Little Darlings on my list of best eerie mysteries! Very highly recommended to anyone who loves a creepy folk tale wrapped into the folds of a compelling contemporary mystery as much as I do.