Member Reviews

“She felt as if she stood balance upon a precipice. Answers on one side, ignorant bliss on the other. And her heart burned too hot for bliss.”

Jane, an accountant with a practical mind, secures a marriage in the form of a business proposal with the town doctor, Augustine Lawrence. This plan is quickly complicated when real feelings start to blossom and Jane soon realizes Augustine has enough skeletons in his closet to fill up a whole estate. His crumbling home outside of town, Lindridge Hall, holds a haunting past that is fraught with blood, secrecy, shame, and the supernatural. Now, Jane must face either choosing to bend to the supernatural forces at work in its halls or challenge them head on.

Fans of horror and gothic literature will shriek with terror and delight as they fly through this masterpiece of a novel. Gritty as graveyard dirt under your fingernails, this book grabs you by the shoulders and drags you into a nightmare you won’t want to wake up from until it’s been told in full.

As shadows from the past continue to plague Lindridge Hall, the stakes grow higher and higher for Jane as she struggles to hold firmly to logic and order while learning new skills akin to alchemy in an attempt to level the supernatural playing field.

Structured like a maze that winds back in on itself before permitting you to exit the fold, the plot superimposes the past onto the present, shaping the terrors that lurk around every corner in this book. This delirious tale weaves itself into the mind of the reader as the plot unravels, and you along with it.

Personally, I read this book into the early hours of the morning because I needed to know what would happen next. It’s no surprise the story haunted my dreams.

“The Death of Jane Lawrence” is everything I wanted from “The Haunting of Hill House” and “Crimson Peak,” but presents itself as a monster entirely of its own design. This book will leave you haunted long after you read the last page.

5/5 Stars.

Content warnings:
Death, blood, medical surgery, needles, ghosts

Note: I was granted an advanced copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

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Where to begin!?

Do YOU believe I’m ghosts?

Have you ever read a tale so terrifying, so twisted, so full of metaphor that you must simply “sit with it a moment” before writing a review?

The Death Of Jane Lawrence is a tightly wound knot the reader must carefully unwind...pick at. Layers of meaning beg for discussion (which I cannot do here for fear of spoilers).

Jane Lawrence wants a husband. She long for a husband for pragmatic (financial) reasons and being a woman of math and logic, she sets about to carefully chose a suitable match. Enter Augustine Lawrence, a quiet, skilled surgeon.

But, what sort of gothic horror could ever be so straight forward?

Jane soon learns all is not what it seems. Shame, guilt and loss are real things for her new spouse...his guilt, his shame, his loss are physical things too. Terrifying things. All-consuming things.

Unsettled, Jane sets out to explore her new home, a home her betrothed wishes she stayed far away from. Why? The new home has shames, holds guilt, has seen loss. It’s a physical presence all its own.

Jane has things that haunt her too...and as she learns more about the mysterious world of her spouse, Jane is wrenched into a Schrödinger's Cat situation.

Here I would love to discuss what those things are but I would spoil—I fear—this strange and wonderful tale.

Starling has created a complex and confusing world full of layered meaning and metaphor. I don’t think any two people will read exactly the same story. We all of us have our ghosts.

Do you believe magic is real?



https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/3857336844

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I found this book to be quite word-y, but I was still intrigued about what would happen. I skipped over a lot of it.

The story is about an orphaned girl in a fantasy country that has been wracked by war. With her parents gone, she is raised by family friends. She doesn't wish to burden them, and so finds a suitor with whom to arrange a business-marriage contract. Initially she is supposed to keep to doing the accounting, but then is thrust into the medical aspects of her new husband's job. Dr Lawrence takes Jane to his family home, which according to contract, she was never supposed to spend the night. But after rainstorms have washed out the road, she finds herself unable to return to the town where she was supposed to live. After spending a few nights at the family home, she sees apparitions and falls into a world where her doctor husband is involved with a magical cult and spends his time treating the physical ailments caused by magic use.

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My full review will be posted on my blog on October 11th, 2021
Caitlin Starling is a master at crafting a tale in which the words themselves are beautiful. Of course, the plot itself was fantastic. However, Starling uses creative phrasings to create a world in which you are enraptured. This is a slow build-up to insanity, and it was done incredibly well.
Jane Lawrence is the perfect main character for this book. Her life is ruled by numbers, rules, and logic. This is truly tested throughout the book. Her husband, and catalyst, Augustine was both loveable and frustrating. He wanted to do what was best for Jane, but he consistently was selfish in his own guilt and grief.
This is one of those books in which reviewing its contents is tricky when you do not want to spoil the story. The pacing was interesting, as it would seem to come to a peak and then lull, in a way that tricked you into feeling safe. Overall, this was a fantastic horror story that kept me on my toes and gave me the ending I wanted.

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You know, I don’t really know what to say in regards to this book. I guess the best way to start is by telling you that this is the perfect story for those that need more gothic romance/terror in their lives. We’ll couple that with a powerful intelligent female main character for maximum awesomeness. Jane is not perfect, but she’s closer to how a female character should be portrayed. We have no time for the whole damsel in distress thing here haha

A lot of the beauty in The Death of Jane Lawrence is the secrets it gives up little by little. These secrets pull you in and keep you engrossed until the very last word. I loved mostly everything about this story and am so stoked I got a chance to read it before it comes out in October.

Thanks so much to NetGalley and St. Martins Press for the opportunity to read this ARC in exchange for an honest review!

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Can you imagine the eerier and more terrifying mash up of House of Leaves- Haunting of Hill House and Rebecca?
By the way this cover deserves its own five blazing stars! This is magnificent, terrifying masterpiece!

If you like the definition of a couple who realize they start to fall for each other as both of their hands hold intestines of a man in pain, lying on operation table, they’ll love Jane and Augustine! Well, aren’t those weirdos perfect for each other?

Jane Shoringfield is extremely logical woman reminds me of combination of coolest and creepiest actress Rosamund Pike and another blood freezing blond Kim Novak: she’s logical, she plays no games, she knows what kind of struggles awaiting unmarried women so she makes list consisted ten men and Augustine Lawrence is the first name at her list.

She just proposes to the man at the beginning and she presents her offer as business arrangement that both sides can be mutually benefited. Jane is good at mathematics and she will organize his accounts as she gets Augustine’s last name. And of course Augustine will resume staying each night at Lindridge Hall-the female estate.

No romance, intimacy or consummating of marriage will be required. They keep their public faces as happily married couple as they keep their independence behind the close doors! Both Augustine and Jane are quiet quirky, awkward ! They are truly weird match made in hell.

But their well thought plans change abruptly at the wedding night because of the unexpected storm and mudslides which prevent Jane’s carriage move back to town. She returns back to Lindridge Hall where her husband dearest forbid her to stay but at the storm there’s nowhere else for her to stay!

As soon as she spends two nights at the place, Jane realizes Augustine keeps dark secrets from her.

Jane checks the accounting book and finds out a recorded large amount of balance belongs to a name called Elodie. Jane finds some entries at the previous months as well. Who the hell that woman? Is she Augustine’s estranged daughter?
And who is the red eyed woman looking at from the window?

The creepy things start to happen behind the closed and locked doors, crumbling walls of Lindridge Hall! Nothing is as it seems! And as the magic starts, everything in Jane’s life traumatically changes! She doesn’t different what is real and what is illusion anymore!

The gothic, twisty version of Rebecca with Alienist vibes and Crimson Peak push you turn the pages faster!

Especially the last third of the book is truly shocking, jaw dropping, a great kind of lunatic!
The beginning of the book was a little compelling! You just have to be patient for the upcoming juicy parts! As soon as Jane finds herself at Lindridge Hall, true magic starts to enchant you!

I only lower one star for my troubled and bumpy start of the book but overall it’s whirlwind, high tension, intense, gothic, blood freezing, WTH I just read kind of promising reading for the genre fans! I highly recommend it!

Special thanks to NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press for sharing this digital reviewer copy with me in exchange my honest opinions.

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Actual rating: 4.5 stars.

This was, overall, just fantastic. It was everything I had wanted and expected from a gothic romance/haunted house horror story, while still being innovative and surprising. The cast was fascinating: Jane in particular felt fully realized and sympathetic as a character, and the psychological elements of this novel were believable and captivating. I also love what Starling did with the overall theme (of shame), and her creative melding of mathematics and magic. To top it off, it was beautifully written and absolutely horrifying.

I knocked off a half star because it got off to a rough start. In the opening chapters, the writing style seemed a bit amateur, and worse, major plot points seemed unnecessarily contrived: specifically, I didn't really buy the reasoning behind Jane's very rushed engagement, her immediate participation in Augustine's surgery, and especially the events that led to her 1) arriving at Lindridge Hall, and then 2) staying there past the first night. These decisions did not make sense to me outside of needing to happen for plot purposes, and also seemed like they could have easily been replaced with other explanations/events that would have been more believable and made more sense given the characters' personalities.

However, once Jane finally arrives at Lindridge Hall, Starling really hits her stride. From then out, the novel is tense and terrifying and full of twists and turns that I could have never predicted (that ending…).

I can't wait to see what Starling does next!

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"The Death of Jane Lawrence" is a fantastic gothic horror novel.
How does one talk about this book without revealing anything? I won't say too much because I don't want to give anything away. However, I can say that Caitlin Starling's has built a truly beautiful gothic novel reminiscent of "Rebecca" with just the right amount of ghosts, gore and magic.
The novel takes in the 1800s. Jane marries Augustine Lawrence simply out of convenience, but she quickly realizes she's gotten more than she expected. Augustine, a gifted surgeon, is a man haunted by his past and magic. He forbids Jane from spending the night at his home Lindridge Hall outside of town, but a storm sends her back on their wedding night. Soon, Jane finds herself in the home's shadowy grips. Things quickly unravel after.
The conclusion of the novel was beautifully done. I cannot wait for others to give this a read so we can delve into the viscerally twisted ending.

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Did you want Rebecca to be creepier? Looking for something that feels vaguely House of Leaves? Want something that will give you weird nightmares? Look no further than this book.

Jane Shoringfield is well aware of the realities of unmarried life as a woman, and though she has never been the romantic sort, she hatches a plan to create a list of unmarried men that she could work out a marriage of convenience for. A man with enough money to sustain them both in exchange for her work as an accountant, no romance required. Her first choice, the odd town doctor, Augustine Lawrence, bows to her initial ask and allows her into his life. The perfect arrangement--he stays each night at his family estate, Lindridge Hall, she manages his finance. They both have the respectable public face of marriage while maintaining their independence.

That is, until she begins to feel something for Augustine. And he begins to feel something back.

A storm, a mudslide, an unanswered knock at the door of the family estate she promised Augustine she'd never spend a night in.

Suddenly, Jane is forced to confront the fact that her husband is not all that he appeared to be, secrets lurking behind the wallpaper of the crumbling Lindridge Hall.

This was such a wonderful, wonderful book. Caitlin Starling's prose is gorgeous and pulls you in, making it nearly impossible to put this book down. This magical twist on classic gothic novels like Rebecca will make you afraid to turn out the light at night. Jane is compelling and real, her power, drive, and passion propelling her to be the heroine of the story as the men around her fail her again and again. It's hard to detail just how brave and whip-smart she is without spoiling much of the plot, but as her story unravels you cannot help but be captivated by her.

The mystery and the horror Starling creates in Lindridge Hall has some serious staying power, the house becoming its own character as in House of Leaves and Mexican Gothic. You will be kept on the edge of your seat as you question your own eyes and Jane as a narrator as the story unfolds.

And the ENDING. Just you wait. That's all I'll say on that.

Get yourself some good mood music, a few candles, and dive into this brilliant, rich story.

Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for providing me an ARC in exchange for my honest review.

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Don't you just hate it when you marry someone and find out a week later that he killed his last wife? It seems like Jane, for being a logical mathematical person, should have asked a few more questions before marriage. Why, for instance, her new husband had to return to his country estate every single night even though he had a perfectly good bedroom kitchen parlor study library in his office building.

Umm, a few questions might have helped Jane keep her body parts and sanity.

Keep in mind that this is an alternative view of history. Women had to fight to be allowed into medical school and were denied licenses even after graduation. The doctor having as many female physician friends as male medical friends would not have been a reality. But, speaking of reality, scientists practicing the dark arts probably wouldn't have been a reality either.

I know this is horror and there has to be a suspension of disbelief on the reader's part, but I had trouble believing that in a week's time Jane, a rational accountant, would be completely turned into someone who would swallow chicken fetuses. To me, the story needed a slower buildup to the creepiness. That's part of suspense--the slow buildup. The gore is graphic so if you have an aversion to blood that smells rank and/or eating disgusting things, you might want to skip a few pages here and there.

An all right book though I found some things hard to swallow (pun intended--there were a lot of gross things swallowed.) Fantastic cover art.

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This is fascinating gothic horror-fantasy and I'm furious it's not out until October (although that's perfect) because I'm dying to discuss and read interpretations of that ending. Loved the ideas explored, loved the original, fresh take on classic tropes and concepts, loved the magic system, loved the ambiguity and willingness to trust that the reader is smart enough to read between the lines. Eerie, visceral, enthralling storytelling.

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Holy hold on to your hat for this gothic and romantic mystery.
Jane, the main character, is pretty level-headed when it comes to life. She looks at life situations thru facts, until she starts working alongside her proposed husband, Augustine. Is he everything he says he is? Why can't she stay at his official home?
I gathered that is in late 1800s due to the setting, and the medical practices that are shared. I enjoyed that part of the story as it is very unique.
The bulk of the mystery takes place at Augustine's home outside of town.
Sterling has done a creative job involving the reader in the emotion of the story... I literally feel like I need a night light tonight.

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The Death of Jane Lawrence by Caitlin Starling is an excellent novel that encompasses several genres: historical fiction, suspense, mystery, gothic fiction, horror, and it truly kept me captivated from beginning to end.

This novel takes place in the latter 1800s as my best guess, as it almost has a Victorian era feel to it. Here we readers take a mind-bending trip down the unraveling of an intricate and mystical plot to find out what is real and what is part of imagination, and what is from another realm.

Through the unveiling and untold portions of narrative (what is not said is just as important as what is said), we see the relationship and marriage of convenience of Jane and Augustine Lawrence. We see the medical oddities, surgical procedures, instruments, methods, and lives taking place within the medical community at that time. We see both individuals wanting one another, however both are haunted and holding back for reasons unique to each of their pasts. The awkwardness of this antagonistic coupling is part fiery part cold and limp.

As each layer of mystery is peeled away, we see that there is so much more under each layer in regards to not only Jane and Augustine, but also with their associates, hired help, colleagues, adopted families, their residences, and pasts.

There are so many mysteries and secrets and lies that I cannot even begin to describe this gem.

I was literally gripping the chair as I desperately turned pages to see what would happen next, what new surprise would be foretold around every dark and shadowy corner within Lindridge Hall, and within the hauntings that are held within.

I was scared, stunned, surprised, fascinated, and drawn to every twist and turn. I wanted for so many things to happen, yet afraid of the consequences that would take hold. And the end....I am still wrapping my brain around the conclusion. I love a book that leaves me thinking about its meaning for many hours thereafter. It isn’t very often that I get to experience that...and I love it.

This book is for anyone that wants a fascinating and addictive ride into the past that balances on this world and the next. An excellent book. I can’t wait to see what others think.

5/5 stars

Thank you NG and St. Martin’s Press for this awesome arc and in return I am submitting my unbiased and voluntary review and opinion.

I am posting this review to my GR, Instagram, and Bookbub accounts immediately and will post it to my Amazon, Instagram, and B&N accounts upon publication.

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I had an enjoyable time reading this and it held my attention the entire way through that I finished it within the day! I enjoyed every page and thought that the plot/story was very unique. Would recommend to anyone!

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Fans of gothic horror are going to absolutely love this book! This novel was like Rebecca with a spark of magic. First, the book really takes you to the location. I loved the feel of the run down house where you can almost smell the musty damp smell. The main character is a smart, grounded woman who thinks in terms of numbers and equations. She's not the type to jump at any shadow. So the slow descent into this creepy house with secrets is just too good. There is also a romance story going on which is what reminded me so much of Rebecca. The combination of the two elements just makes such a good story. I highly recommend this book to anyone who is looking for the traditional "haunted house" story but with a refreshing new take!

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My full review will be on my blog 30th September 2021.

Content Warnings: graphic surgical descriptions (1800s medical practices), body horror, gore, death, drug use, miscarriage.

I knew a lot about this book going into it, but somehow it still managed to surprise me at almost every turn. One thing that wasn’t a surprise was Caitlin Starling’s flawless prose. As always, I was blown away by the gorgeous writing itself. In all of her books, I don’t think Starling has ever wasted a word – everything builds together to create a beautiful and deep and usually horrifying world and THE DEATH OF JANE LAWRENCE is no different. If you like your horror steeped in gothic atmosphere and dangerous, gory magic, look no further.

The majority of this book is set in Lindridge Hall, the decaying family manor of Augustine Lawrence, Jane’s husband of convenience, and in true gothic fashion the manor feels like a character in its own right. It’s the perfect setting for the terrible, terrible things that Jane and Augustine go through, and i love the vivid descriptions that make it feel steeped in history and fear. It’s isolated, crumbling and atmospheric, and made me tense and anxious every time night fell and Jane was still in the Hall. I’ve read a lot of gothic horror and I am deeply impressed by the way that Starling built on the traditional characteristics of the genre to make the reader feel like they know exactly where it’s going, and then subverted all of those expectations. There’s a lot going on under the surface of this novel, and I would love to see more of this world.

Jane herself is, predictably, my absolute favourite part of this novel. A dedicated woman in a hellish situation of magic and madness? I love her. From the first chapter she stole my heart with her unusual and business-like approach to their marriage, and I adored seeing the way that she relates to the world. Jane is an accountant, focused on numbers and facts. She likes the tangible and has a strong sense of self and an almost stubborn grasp on the world around her. Which, obviously, makes her the perfect protagonist to stumble into her new husband’s messy past, full of secrets and magic. The way that she approaches magic is fascinating to me. I can’t go into it in too much detail without spoiling it, and I love the way it unravels far too much to risk that, but it’s a really interesting perspective and was a lot of fun to read as someone who habitually reads a lot of books about magic and craft.

The ending of this novel was honestly a mindfuck, in the best way possible. I stayed up far past my bedtime because I couldn’t put it down, and the first thing I did the next morning was reach for my kindle to finish it. It’s complicated and deliciously twisty and I know that the second I have a physical copy of this in my hands, I’m going to read it all over again because I have a feeling it’s going to be just as good the second time around.

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