Member Reviews
This book was received from the Author, and Publisher, in exchange for an honest review. Opinions and thoughts expressed in this review are completely my own.
The Last To Know by Jo Furniss is an eerie atmospheric psychological thriller that literally pulls you in from the from the very first page. A book that won’t let you go until the final page had been turned.
A suspense based on family tragedy and lies. Jo weaves delivers a sinister manor house on a medieval estate, with local legends and lore. Dark family secrets. Written with descriptive prose. This one of the tingling down the spine of a dreadful thing that happened here twenty years ago? And why does everyone apart from Rose seem to know the secret of Hurtwood
When archaeological dig uncovers human remains on the strange what looks to be a manmade hill where lurking Hurtwood House sits. A local police sergeant, Ellie Trevelyan is tasked with the job of solving the cold case of the mystery surrounding the notable, haunted Hurtwood House. The story is told in alternating chapters by Rose and Ellie, that allows the reader to have the full experience.
The Last To Know is a ominous suspenseful filled tale, Jo Furniss delivers a well-written, unique and twisty read here that had me pretty much-questioning everything.
With unique descriptive prose and intriguing characters, along with family dynamics makes this a superb book.
I love a good slow burn and this fabulous suspense thriller is just that. With it's vivid descriptions, intense intrigue AND family secrets and lies it will pull you in from the first car ride down the foggy, rutted road to the family home in an English village. Furniss' brilliant and elegant writing makes this novel just exactly perfect. I loved it!
Thank you to Netgalley, the publishing house and the author for the opportunity to read a complimentary advance reader copy of this book in return for a review based upon my honest opinion.
When Rose Kynaston and her husband Dylan move to his hometown with their 5 yr old son, Aled, she thinks she is finally putting down roots.
It appears Dylan hasn’t been completely honest with his small town, his house is a scary mausoleum on a hill that seems to be falling down, the towns people despise his family, and his mother whom Rose was hoping we have an active role in helping to raise their son seems to have dementia. Not only that but the house itself seems to have some weird goings-on, and there’s more secrets in the story then you can even count. I found the first part of the book kind of confusing with all the different storylines going on in parts of it seemed hard to follow and I hope that it would all be cohesive in the end. Some of the story was really interesting and well read I really enjoyed the history of Hurtwood House. There were so many side plot lines though, that it was kind of confusing and then by the time we got to the end of the book it seem to wrap it all up really quickly. I did enjoy the main ending of the story and there were lots of twists and turns to keep me reading well into the night.
I will definitely be checking out more books by this author.
// 𝐁𝐎𝐎𝐊 / 𝐑𝐄𝐕𝐈𝐄𝗪 //
⭐⭐⭐⭐
𝘘𝘖𝘛𝘋: 𝘥𝘰 𝘺𝘰𝘶 𝘭𝘪𝘬𝘦 𝘴𝘭𝘰𝘸 𝘰𝘳 𝘲𝘶𝘪𝘤𝘬 𝘣𝘶𝘳𝘯 𝘵𝘩𝘳𝘪𝘭𝘭𝘦𝘳 𝘯𝘰𝘷𝘦𝘭𝘴?
It's my first stop on @katerockbooktours and I couldn't be more excited to share @jofurnissauthor's upcoming novel #TheLastToKnow. This book hit shelves on August 11th, so you can grab your copy today! Thank you #KateRockBookTours and @lakeunionauthors for my chance to read this!
𝘚𝘺𝘯𝘰𝘱𝘴𝘪𝘴:
American journalist Rose Kynaston has just relocated to the childhood home of her husband, Dylan, in the English village of his youth. There’s a lot for Rose to get used to in Hurtwood. Like the family’s crumbling mansion, inhabited by Dylan’s reclusive mother, and the treacherous hill it sits upon, a place of both sinister folklore and present dangers. Then there are unwelcoming villagers, who only whisper the name Kynaston—like some dreadful secret, a curse. Everyone knows what happened at Hurtwood House twenty years ago. Everyone except Rose. And now that Dylan is back, so are rumors about his past. When an archaeological dig unearths human remains on the hill, local police sergeant Ellie Trevelyan vows to solve a cold case that has cast a chill over Hurtwood for decades. As Ellie works to separate rumor from facts, Rose must fight to clear the name of the man she loves. But how can Rose keep her family safe if she is the last to know the truth?
They always say ... you can never really hide from your past and this book is certainly an example of how exposing the skeletons in your closet can affect everyone in your life! Your anxiety will definitely be through the roof reading this one. This one had so many characters that I thought were guilty at different points in time and once the truth finally broke, everything clicked perfectly into place. This is a slow burn thriller, but absolutely worth reading! And ... the cover of this book is so gorgeous and does a fantastic job capturing the creepy town where the novel takes place!
This was a slow burn, so if you like fast paced thrillers you should be aware. It was a very enjoyable slow burn for me as Rose Kynaston has just moved back to her husband Dylan’s childhood home in the English village of Hurtwood (that name tho) and Rose slowly starts to realize things are not quite as they seem. For one, this house on a hill appears to be haunted, Dylan’s mother probably has dementia and of course he is in denial, and something happened at the house 20 years ago that she knows nothing about but everyone in town cannot stop talking about as they, specifically Dylan, are back. Oh and I forgot to mention there is an archeological dig on the hill and human remains are found….
This goes back and forth between Rose and Ellie, the police sergeant trying to solve the case that has been cold for decades and gets new life once the remains are found, and both women are trying to piece together what happened all those years ago. As I said, I really enjoyed this one, and as Rose / Ellie began to each figure things out on their own I could not put this down. I loved the ending, the overall creepy atmosphere and also the haunted house element that was added in. I definitely recommend this one!
Thank you to Kate Rock Book Tours for the gifted book to review.
Rose Kynaston, an American journalist moves to England with her husband Dylan and their son Adel from Kenya to start a new life in Dylan's childhood home and town, in Hurtwood. The crumbling mansion is occupied by Gwendoline, Dylan's mother who seemed to be suffering from dementia. While Rose is trying to get used to living in a small village, she discovers how much the villagers seemed to despise the name Kynaston, a rumor about a soccer player who seemed to have committed suicide some twenty years ago and how Dylan's father is responsible for the apparent suicide. And now that Dylan has returned back, those rumors seemed to have resurfaced once again. Then one day, while doing an archaeological excavation, human skeletal remains are found on the hill and the local police sergeant, Ellie vows to solve the case. Rose meanwhile is determined to clear her husband's name.
Initially at first, the book was a bit slow paced but soon, it got it's momentum, towards the middle, with the discovery of skeletal remains. There were so many suspects with Dylan being the main suspect and as a reader, you would hope that Rose was right to defend and clear her husband's name. The secrets, the twist towards the end was something that was unexpected. I actually started liking the book by the middle and I was hooked into the story.
The story was told from Rose's perspective mostly, with her sheer determination to investigate more about the alleged soccer player who committed crime. She is a journalist and she would do anything to save her husband and clear his name. I really like Rose's determination and she became a favorable character to me. The story itself is somewhat realistic. Gwendoline's dementia problem was outlined well in the book. I must say the book was well written although as I said, the first few chapters were a bit boring to me.
Overall, this is a good psychological thriller and also a quick read although at the beginning, to me it was a bit slow paced. Worth four stars in my opinion!
This is my first book by this author and I really enjoyed it. Dylan, Rose and their son Aled move back to Dylan’s family home in Shopshire England from their jobs as journalists in Nigeria. Dylan’s mother puts them in a cottage on the expansive property but not in the main house with her. She has lived here as a recluse since her husband died. Rose starts to realize the family is not well liked in town and that Dylan’s father was under suspicion of sexual abuse of a boy he coached in soccer. The boy died after falling off of a cliff at the property. Was it Suicide or something more sinister? More questions arise when another body is found and Rose realizes she doesn’t know a lot about her husbands history growing up. She starts to look for answers and realizes everyone has secrets to hide. Overall the book flowed well and gave me an uneasy feeling about what would happen in the end. I liked the two person view point between Rose and Detective Ellie. I wished a few things had been fleshed out more regarding Roses ex fling but mostly it was wrapped up well and I wasn’t able to predict all of the twists and turns. Thanks to Netgalley and Lake Union Publishing for an advanced digital copy.
The Last to Know is creepy, twisted and fantastic! I found myself holding my breath in spots. This book is perfect for the big screen!
The Last to Know is an interesting, engaging and mysterious read.
Rose moves with her husband and son to the family mansion in an English village. It doesn’t take Rose long to understand that there is more to the family history, the home and the village than she bargained for.
Will Rose cope with her past, sort through the troubling present and make the right decisions to ensure a hopeful future?
I was immediately drawn into the story. That’s because you have a glimpse of what is to come and you have to read on to find out how it came to be.
The writing is eloquent and enjoyable. The setting descriptions elicit a sensory experience and you imagine yourself visiting the countryside. The characters are likeable (mostly) and believable; a typical small village mix of characters. All in all it is an enjoyable story with some predictability and some surprises.
I recommend this story if you enjoy an intriguing English countryside mystery. However, be warned there are some uncomfortable topics: mental illness, sexual abuse, abduction.
Thanks to the NetGalley, the publisher and the author for the free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
Rose has been working as a broadcast journalist for a decade in Africa, where she met her husband, Dylan. After marrying and having a son there, the couple have decided to move to Dylan’s hometown in England. Rose finds right away that she stands out in the village, first because of her American accent, and next because of her marriage into the Kynaston family. Unfortunately, she learns soon enough that the villagers talk about Dylan’s late father in connection with some kind of shameful scandal in the past.
Soon after their arrival in town, an archaeological dig on the family’s land started in connection with a TV series turns up human bones — from about two decades earlier, the same time of the questionable incident that sullied the Kynaston name.
Local police sergeant Ellie Trevelyan gets involved, trying to get to the truth behind all the rumors. Rose works with her and with the village’s sole newspaper writer/editor to look for information from the past to know the truth for herself and, she hopes, to clear her husband of any suspicion. Meanwhile, her mother-in-law has been a recluse for years and now may be exhibiting signs of dementia — and while she needs her help watching her little boy when she works, Rose worries for his safety at the crumbling-down family home and in certain particularly dangerous parts of the property.
I enjoy stories with old secrets, and I admit I’m a devoted Anglophile. So the setting of an old mansion sitting on a centuries-old manmade hill, with suspicious deaths in the past, checked my boxes quite nicely. The Last to Know is a satisfying read for those who share these interests. It’s not one that is going to stick in my mind for long, but it was entertaining.
Loved it. So dark and twisty. The perfect book to curl up with on a rainy afternoon in your favorite chair with your preferred drink and loose yourself in. How much do you know of the man you married? Not as much as you thought. Come along with Rose as she struggles to decipher what she thought she knew and what the truth really is. Happy reading!
In "The Last to Know" by Jo Furniss follows pre-retirement cop Ellie and journalist Rose Kynaston as they circle around a twenty year old murder. Ellie claims that this is the case that still keeps her awake at night. Rose is married into the family that was destroyed by the case. The only person who really knows what happened is dead... or does someone know more than they're sharing? Who is actually the murderer?
This book was so so good. One of my biggest pet peeves is when I can figure out the murderer too quickly and honestly this book had me guessing until the end. I felt like all the clues were pointing to one character, but then I was wrong! This book provides so much background for the different characters, but the more info you have the harder it is to see the truth.
I will admit that some parts of the book felt unnecessary, like the tv show producer who lived at the foot of the mansion. But overall, this book felt well constructed. There were some parts that I didn't quite grasp, maybe because it's set in England? But those things can be easily overlooked. In the end, I gave this book 4 stars and recommended it to some friends because it was a great quick thrill!
Thanks to Netgalley and Lake Union Publishing for the ARC in exchange for my honest review! This book comes out today!
The Last to Know by Jo Furniss had everything I was looking for in a book right now; it was creepy, atmospheric, and super suspenseful which included a bit of the supernatural kind. I loved that it had alternating viewpoints between police sergeant Ellie Trevelyan and Rose, and that plus the short chapters helped the book speed by. It's definitely a slow burn and I read it a bit slower than other books, but I loved every minute of it. I absolutely adore the cover of the book and I think it goes so well with the plot that it's worth pointing out.
I could tell that Furniss has had a career in journalism because it really shines through in the novel. I really enjoyed the mix of police procedural and a journalist's POV (Rose), especially when the human remains are found, and the mystery really begins. I didn't remember the synopsis prior to diving in, and The Last to Know is a great book to go into knowing very little. There is such an eerie vibe to this book, and I loved that so much.
I thought the ending was shocking, although I did have a couple of suspicions that ended up panning out. These suspicions turned into what I expected plus more that I hadn't figured out, which was great since it's always kind of a bummer to guess twists. This was my first read from Furniss, but it will certainly not be my last. I loved the creepiness and how well thought out the plot was, plus the fact that it kept me glued to the pages despite the slow burn. I highly recommend checking out The Last to Know if you are in the mood for a super dark, atmospheric mystery!
Thank you to NetGalley for my advance review copy. All opinions and thoughts are my own.
I’d seen quite a few positive reviews about The Last To Know and was intrigued by the book description, but to be honest I feel like I read a completely different book to other people.
I was expecting a gothic vibe, which was unfortunately missing. I felt the characters lacked depth and I didn’t particularly like any of them. Least of all Rose. Then there was this entire background story that didn’t add anything to the story whatsoever and a character I assumed would have a part to play at some point but then seemed to have been forgotten about,
Yes, there’s a mystery to solve. However, I always felt the outcome could only possibly go one way and I was right. The Last To Know is a story full of secrets and finding a place to call home. It’s undoubtedly a quickie read, which quite obviously appeals to a lot of readers. Sadly, I wasn’t one of them.
A very dark mystery, set in the gloomy remote English countryside, when an American journalist Rose, settles there with her native husband and their small son. She learns quickly, that the town’s folk aren’t fans of Dylan’s family, after a young boy’s suspicious death 20 years ago, which placed his father, a well known soccer manager, into suspicion. And after they arrive, several other remains are discovered, resulting in a full blown investigation of their family and fears for her family.
Jo Furniss is a very talented mystery writer, as I found with her previous novel, The Trailing Spouse. Interesting characters and twisted plots make for a chilling read! This story had that and much more intrigue.
My thanks to #LakeUnionPublishing, #NetGalley and #JoFurness for the ARC.
All opinions are my own. Read it, you won’t be disappointed!
The best kind of mysteries are ones that are centered around a large, spooky house, possibly haunted by ghosts, but definitely haunted by the past. Enter the newest thriller, The Last to Know by Jo Furniss. Not only is there a house set on medieval property, there are local legends and lore, family secrets, old-fashioned detective work, investigative journalism, and so much more.
Jo weaves a marvelous drama, from the histories of an infamous family in a small town to the perilous beginnings of a romantic relationship set in a war-torn country, you’ll travel the world within these 318 pages. Throughout all of this, you’re witness to the formidable and intricate bond between mother and son, father and daughter, parent and child.
Numerous surprises and revelations at every turn make this novel a page-turner that you will not want to put down.
Thank you to Lake Union Publishing for my copy. The opinions are my own.
This is the type of book that you can't put down. I kept saying to myself 'five more minutes" and I will go to bed. Time flew by because I was so engrossed in this book.
The gothic setting of this book had me right away - a supposed haunted house set upon an historical site, in rural England, in gloomy weather - perfect for a suspense based on family tragedy and lies.
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After moving to her husband’s ancestral home in England, Rose instantly knows that something isn’t right. She quickly uncovers that Dylan’s family is surrounded in suspicion after the death of a young boy over twenty years ago. Shortly after arriving, an archeological dig on the family property finds human remains and Dylan’s family is once again thrust into the spotlight and the local police begin to dig into the past. As the story unfolds, it becomes clear that many lies were told, lives lost and families ruined - and the local police sergeant, Ellie, is determined to solve the crimes that have haunted this small town for decades.
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The perspective switches from Rose to Ellie in each chapter which is the perfect way to understand both the present and the past and the view of the family and the police investigation. The gothic setting is excellent at giving you all the mysterious and creepy vibes. Closing in to the end of the book, I was still left guessing at the ‘whodunnit’. That said, the book was a little slow through the first half and many of the side stories seemed pointless and confusing while simply not adding any value to the main plot line. Sometimes less is just better. Overall, it was a good read that will keep you guessing - or at least it did for me. Thank you to the author and publisher, along with @katerockbooktours for the copy for my honest review. ⭐️⭐️⭐️.
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Great character development and plenty of action, mystery, past secrets and suspense is a great formula for a book that I didn't want to put down. The writing flowed beautifully and made me feel less conscious of the fact that many of the terms used in the story I wasn't familiar with since I am not from the UK and haven't done any studying or research about the UK. I did look up the unfamiliar terms as I read the book so learned a few new things. I voluntarily reviewed an advanced readers copy of this book thanks to NetGalley, the publisher, and the author.
3.5 stars rounded up to 4
American journalist, Rose Kynaston has just relocated to the childhood home of her husband, Dylan, in the English village of his youth. There's a lot for Rose to get used to in Hurtwood. Like the family's crumbling mansion, inhabited by Dylan's reclusive mother, and the treacherous hill it sits upon. Then there's the unwelcoming villagers who only whisper the name Kynaston - like some kind of dreadful secret, a curse.
The story is narrated by Rose and the senior Sergeant Ellie Trevelyan who wants to get to the bottom of the case that still haunts her. Years ago a young football player fell off a cliff and died. Now, bones have been unearthed belonging to someone else. There's lots of twists and I did not expect the ending. The first half of the book the pace is slow but it picks up in the second half. We learn everything we needed to know about the characters as the book is descriptivley written. It could be a bit confusing at times. This is an enjoyable read.
I would like to thank NetGalley, Lake Union Publishing and the author Jo Furniss for my ARC in exchange for an honest review.