Member Reviews
Ms. Golding is an up and coming new author, and Little Darlings is her first published book. I found Little Darlings to be a hauntingly realistic story with a psychological and supernatural twist. There were times that I felt like the story was a little slow, but it plot built upon it, and I was drawn in. Little Darlings is a masterful rendition of a modern day fairy tale....not the happy children's fairy tale, but the original dark and twisted tale. I look forward to reading more from Ms. Goldring.
Engaging thriller that makes a quick read. Unfortunately, I'm a little over the "crazy mom" trope in domestic thrillers.
Little Darlings was a book that had excellent writing filled with unreliable characters that was honestly fascinating to read about. I couldn't stop reading this book and was thrilled at how it turned out. Thanks for sending me an eARC in exchange for an honest review!
A thriller that got me at the edge of my seat. I'm a sucker for a good mystery novel that involves a mother and child.
The protagonist, Lauren, is a new mother to two twins. She's managing as much as she can. However, something came to her that night she was alone with her twins. Grim folktale legends about twins is what grabbed my attention and it did not disappoint. I also heard this will be turned into a movie production and I can’t wait to watch it. The story did come to life and I can see why it’s being turned into a movie.
I give this book four stars. A mother’s love is put to the test. Will you do anything to get back what is yours?
This book was interesting since it was developed from a old fairytale. I had a hard time getting into it because it seemed to kind of drag in the beginning. I don’t think this was the right fit for me maybe because I didn’t really enjoy or become engrossed in the story like I usually am and I can’t put a finger on what it was exactly that didn’t mess with me. I hate to say it but I would not recommend this book☹️
🤓❤️📚❣️
Eerie, strange happenings with a mother with newborn twin boys. A gripping storyline that means you cannot put this book down. Her fears and thoughts after birth mirror so many other mothers' thoughts after birth and are why her story resonates with mothers all over.
There are strong well-defined characters.
Joanne Harper, the DS. She is strong, dependable and a voice of reason. She is trying to make sense of what she sees, hears and experiences. I enjoyed her calm presence even when things seemed to be totally strange.
Husband Patrick seems to be floating outside the whole picture - not really part of his wife and sons's lives, leaving the parenting mostly to Lauren - leaving her feeling isolated and unbelievable.
Lauren, seems prone to mental issues, but you get the feeling she is a devoted, caring mother despite the issues surrounding her, you feel sorry for her while she is trying to make sense of her confusion.
The addition of extracts from fairy tales and other stories all contribute to the eeriness and sinister background events. Amy also contributes enormously to shedding light on the sinister side.
The ending is very strange, but ties up the story brilliantly. I was continually wondering whilst reading how on earth this story will resolve itself. A satisfying read which hints to something darker in Patrick. It will be interesting to see how this book will play out as a movie - I'm not sure if Lauren will come across on the screen as the reader perceives her in the book - someone who despite of her actions is still the nicer portion of the couple.
Thank you to NetGalley and the publishers for allowing me the chance to read this powerful book.
Lauren is a new mother to twin boys, she is tired and stressed but she knows that the woman who appeared in her room in the maternity award, threatening to swap Lauren's twin boys for hers was real despite there being no evidence of anyone else being there that night and everyone assuming she was just seeing things. Lauren knows she must do everything to save her little boys.
Little Darlings is based off the welsh fairy tale 'A brewery of eggshells' about a woman with newborn twins who are swapped with changelings.
This book is more of a contemporary novel with suggested magic realism, rather than a mystery/thriller novel. Which going into this book I thought was a mystery/thriller.
As you read this story, you are often questioning if what Lauren is going through actually real or if she is just going through post natal depression.
Patrick, Lauren's husband was so annoying, and I didn't really care for Jo Harpers character who is the detective that investigates the case.
And the whole story was predictable which didn't leave me satisfied when the book had ended.
Thank you to net galley who provided me a copy in exchange for an honest review.
I didn't think this was a mystery or thriller. I think it was more magical realism. A woman thinks her twin infants were replaced in the night with monsters and no one believes her or notices anything, It is rather chilling but not really thrilling or mysterious. I was expecting something a little different.
Little Darlings. Even the title is a little off-putting. A little too saccharine, it sounds like a phrase used to thinly veil something closer to contempt. The cover is dark and twisty; reminiscent of things growing and stretching. Reaching. Clawing. Long story short, I knew right away that I was in for a good scare.
Little Darlings is the debut novel of Melanie Golding and holy crap, way to start off with a bang! This book tells the story of new mother Lauren who recently gave birth to twin boys. While still in the hospital, Lauren is visited by a ragged, frightening woman who threatens to take her boys if she leaves them for even a minute. She says she will switch them and Lauren will never know.
Obviously, Lauren is freaked out after this interaction, she tries to tell hospital personnel and nobody believes her. The video surveillance on the ward shows nobody coming or going and Lauren is treated as though this was a hallucination.
But Lauren knows what she saw. And knows that she has to keep her boys safe. Sleep-deprived, hormonal, and frightened, Lauren has to fight her way to the boys she knows to be hers.
Part dark fairy tale, part folklore, this book was creepy and atmospheric in the best way. It left me turning pages at a furious pace, questioning every detail, and not trusting any of the characters.
Assuming you haven’t had a baby recently (if you have, wait a year or two), you should get your hands on a copy of this one the next time you’re looking for a chilling page-turner!
Huge thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.
Wonderfully written modern tale of the Irish myth of the Changling. My grandmother is Irish, and I grew up hearing these types of stories. It was very fun to see this myth brought to modern days. The writing of the book was superb and engaging. I loved every moment of it. Thank you for letting me review this.
The best way to describe Little Darlings is as a ‘Dark & Sinister Fairytale’. Melanie Golding has combined elements of a psychological thriller and folklore to perfection to craft a modern dark fairytale. Almost everyone has read a dark folk story in their childhood and this will bring back memories of that
Amazing, tense edge of the seat reading. Doubting motherhood, spooky visits and the promise of her twins being taken, this book has a lot to offer! Along with twists and a fight for what is right, when no one else really understands. To the end where you never really know who you can trust!
Recommend read!
Did not finished it because it got expired as I had some family emergency. But definitely something that left me curious, which I will definitely buy to finish it to find out the ending.
I received this book in exchange for a honest review from NetGalley.
I really liked this book but it is definitely not the book for you if you have a difficult time with children in danger or mothers with mental health issues. It is dark and mysterious and even now I am still guessing about the ending. I love the connections that it made to class fairy-tales and folklore. I love fairy-tale retellings so much. Overall a great book but can have really difficult themes in some parts read with care.
To be honest, I still don't know what to think of Little Darlings. I want to like it because it deals with the fae, in its own way. Yet, I am not a fan of books that are so open-ended, that leave the entire story to the reader. I never did enjoy the Choose Your Own Adventure series; I am certainly not going to enjoy them now. Yet that is what I think of when I think of Melanie Golding's novel. The story has no right or wrong answer, so you are free to choose to think what you will of Lauren's conviction that her babies are not hers. For my own peace of mind, I choose the more poetic side, not because I love fae stories - which I do - but because the prosaic side is too depressing. That being said, any reader easily upset by missing children or triggered by mental trauma should avoid this one.
Not since the novel “Baby Teeth” have I gotten serious chills from reading. This book was extremely hard for me to put down, and after reading, the passages stayed with me. It is not only a thriller in the likes of Stephen King, but also an honest depiction of new motherhood, and the history of folklore.
Lauren is a new mom of twin boys, so one would expect her to be exhausted and overwhelmed. Her husband Patrick means well but like some new dads, doesn’t quite know what to do and ultimately leaves the majority of the childcare to Lauren. As someone who had her first child a year ago, I sympathized with Lauren’s feelings of pure exhaustion, worry, and frustration. When she was angry with her husband, I felt it along with her. When the doctors wouldn’t listen to her, I wanted to shout at them on her behalf. That’s on behalf of the author, who writes very vividly.
What a creepy story!!! It’s a domestic thriller (kind of), Grimm’s fairytale, detective drama, and mystery all rolled into one....and if you’re expecting a baby, have just had a baby, are ever around babies, have seen a baby, know what babies are....be warned. The creep factor is HIGH. Following a very difficult and traumatic delivery, Lauren is recovering alongside her brand new identical twin boys when she encounters a creepy woman with two creepy eel-like babies in a basket. The woman threatens to take Lauren’s babies and replace them with her own claiming they would look just like her babies and she wouldn’t be able to tell the difference. Lauren hides in the bathroom with her babies and calls for help, but the woman is gone and there is no trace of her on the security cameras, so Lauren is written off as being paranoid and mentally ill. A few weeks later, the babies are abducted, but when they are found, Lauren knows without a doubt they aren’t her real babies. Could the creepy woman have been real? Or is she actually losing her mind?
This book was super creepy and intriguing but kind of missed the mark for me. The concept was wild and interesting but didn’t hold my attention as well as I’d hoped, but that could be mostly because I’m not really into magical realism and there was a definite scary fairytale vibe to it. It was definitely well-written, and I’m excited to see what else Melanie Golding writes in the future!
I DNFed this book several chapters in. As much as I was drawn in by the premise and the cover art, I just didn't connect to the characters or the plot in the beginning enough to want to keep reading. I generally don't give star ratings to books that I DNF (because I feel it's unfair to the author) but I'm giving this a 1 since star ratings are mandatory.
4.5 stars. I stayed up late reading this and then picked it up again as soon as I woke up, not putting it down til it was finished! I was shocked by how basically clean this was (relative to typical adult books of this nature). It dragged in places and wasn’t quite as thrilling as I wanted, but overall I thoroughly enjoyed this modern English folklore-horror.
I ended up reading a physical BOTM copy, but many thanks to the publisher for a free digital copy of this book via Netgalley in exchange for an honest review, without which I may not have even heard of this book as I haven’t heard much buzz on booktube about it.
Took me a while longer than I wanted to get to this one but I really loved it!
It was pretty dark and twisted and kinda scary as well, it was exactly what I needed right now and I'll probably also reread it around October!