Member Reviews

I loved the southern gothic setting of this, and thought it was a very fun fall read. Ashley Winstead is a really strong writer, and shows so much range with her books. The characters in this one weren’t my favorite, but I always appreciate her writing and sometimes in Halloween season, you just need something to enhance the ambiance!

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This one is HEAVY. don’t take the content warnings for granted. I really appreciate that they were included. This is by far my favorite book of hers so far, and I have loved everything she has written.

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I really enjoyed the first half of this book, the small town Bible thumping vibes were well written. Unfortunately, the book didn't go in a direction that I enjoyed. When everything was revealed and certain characters were confronted it seemed very unrealistic.

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I have loved every book that Ashley Winstead has written, and Midnight is the Darkest Hour is no exception.

I struggled to put this one down. The power, potential, and threat of teenage girls is at the heart of this story – but so is the story of Twilight, just to wrap it all together! While the ending at first frustrated me, I realized fairly quickly how perfect it was for Ruth and Everett's story and I wouldn't want to see it end any other way.

Part of what I love about Ashley's writing is that each book truly immerses me in the town she has created – no matter how horrifying. It's absolutely incredible and I can never get enough of them.

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In the deep South, can Ruth, the daughter of a preacher, break free and find a life of her own when she's been raised to be obedient and docile? What happens when she shares a secret with the town's bad boy? I enjoyed this book and the vibes were spooky and full of intrigue. I will say, I could have done without the multitude of Twilight references, but I understand what the author was trying to accomplish. Ruth has dreams that will take her out of her town and out from under her father's thumb, but first, she digs deep to find the true history of all of the unexplained deaths that are coming to light, including one she is responsible for. I loved watching Ruth develop and grow into her own woman. As I said, I was tired of hearing how deeply she is Team Edward, but what can you do?

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This book is for the twilight girlies, like myself 💁🏻‍♀️
I loved the romance between Ruth and Everett, this book has me NEEDING a paranormal romance after this one. I loved the slow burn, and their friendship is just very sweet.

The mystery is solid. There are a lot of twists, and the tension is pretty consistent as well. So that aspect was great. My only complaint was that it wasn't AS deep into the religious trauma as I was expecting, which is probably a plus for a lot of people. There definitely is some southern christian small town tropes in here, with all the hyper-judgemental townsfolk, and the small town gossiping; but it just didn't quite get as dark in that aspect as I was hoping for. But I was still glued to this one the entire way through. Would definitely recommend to anyone interested!

I also really enjoy that Ashley Winstead's thrillers all are very distinct from each other. She has some serious range. She was already an auto-buy author for me after The Last Housewife, but the variety in these stories has me very interested in what's coming in the future.

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As soon as I heard this had Twilight Vibes, I had to snag it and it did not disappoint! Definitely recommend.

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Ashley Winstead is already one of my favorite authors so I was really anticipating this read - and it delivered!

Set in a small southern town, Midnight is the Darkest hour just immediately draws a reader in and doesn't let go. This propulsive read will have you turning pages so fast. I loved the setting, the atmosphere, the Twilight vibes, and the characters.

Perfect for fans of Stacy Willingham!

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I really wanted to love this book. I really did. Instead, I just kinda liked it. I've read other Ashley Winstead books in the past and enjoyed them. That's why I was disappointed when Midnight fell flat for me.

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wow this was disappointing. after loving ashley winstead's other two thrillers this........was just straight up boring. at no point was i worried about any of our characters and the ending felt ridiculous. i was so excited for it too. here's to hoping her next thriller release will be better! i havent written her off yet.

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I loved this book! Everything that Ashley writes is a hit for me. I’m ecstatic that I had the opportunity to read this book early.

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Thank you to the publisher & Tantor Audio for gifting me the audiobook!
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I want to preface by saying Ashley Winstead is one of my favorite authors and her two previous books were solid 5 stars for me. But sometimes a book from your favorite author doesn’t resonate with you and I feel that’s what’s happened here.

I found the story to be all over the place with a lot of heavy themes, religious extremism, toxic relationships and YA romance all mashed together into this one book. I’m not even sure which genre this book tried to be. Thriller? Horror? Literary fiction? YA Horror/Romance? I love me a genre bender but I felt this book didn’t fit anywhere although tried to fit into a mold.

I get the feeling the reader was supposed to appreciate Ruth and Everett’s friendship but I found them both to be somewhat toxic, if not downright weird with each other. And the Twilight obsession mix added in was just…awkward. That scene where Ruth thinks Everett is possibly supernatural? Huh?

I think the audiobook was the redeeming factor that allowed me to finish the book faster than I would have, had I only read it in physical format.

All this being said, you know damn well I’m going to hit that request button when Ashley’s next book shows up. My opinion of this book is in the minority so I hope my review doesn’t detract you from picking up Midnight Is The Darkest Hour.

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In My Dreams I Hold a Knife was one of my favorite books last year so I was very excited to get my hands on this title. It had also been touted for fans of Verity - which is one of my all-time favs! I see absolutely no connection between this book and Verity - I'm not even sure where the Goodread Gods even made that connection?!?! This book was just not for me though I waffled between liking it and disliking it (mostly because the middle was long and boring and the ending was much more interesting). I found that it read very YA which isn't really my preferred read. I think it reads that way because Ruth is very naive but also because there is just too much discussion of Twilight - there was one Twilight-esque exchange between Ruth and Ever that gave me STRONG second-hand embarrassment. My opinion is that this is a mash-up of Twilight, Where the Crawdads Sing, and Bonnie and Clyde.

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Many thanks to my friends at @bookmarked @netgalley @tantoraudio and @librofm for the #gifted copies of this book.

A dark, twisty read with cultish vibes and Twilight references.

That’s the kind of synopsis that gets my attention, even more so with Winstead being an author I’ve been excited to try.

But sometimes high anticipation creates a letdown.

Gosh I wanted to love this read. Outsiders for main characters. A swampy setting where a skull is found. An examination of religious zealotry. This is a story frame I generally find captivating. Yet something in the execution fell short, never creating that necessary connection for me.

What did work:
👍🏻 dark depiction of a small, southern town
👍🏻 people behaving badly in the name of religion
👍🏻 well placed Twilight references

Ultimately, the one-dimensional characters and drawn-out plot stilted the well-executed elements alongside my enjoyment. And then THAT ENDING. Ugh. That ending. It’s rare that I fully hate an ending. But this one, I did.

Still, I’ll seek out Winstead’s next book. I know her writing is wildly loved for a reason.

🎧 Set in Louisiana (read: Lou-see-ann-uh), this book begs an authentic southern drawl. As I listened, I found myself utterly perplexed that the publisher chose someone with a fake accent. It’s not just kind-of-fake. It’s bad-fake! So, if you’re queuing this one up, my southern roots prohibit me from recommending the audio. Stick with the print.

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Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for a copy of this arc. It was so much fun. I enjoyed every second of reading it.

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I really enjoyed this book! It's my second by Ashley Winstead and it has cemented her in my mind as an auto-read. The story follows Ruth and Everett, outcast friends in Bottom Springs, a super-religious evangelical town in Louisiana. Ruth and Everett are bonded by a dark and violent secret, and when a skull is found in the swamp the town begins to be swept up in a witch hunt fervor looking for the mythical "low man."

Things I liked: Nuanced criticism of religion and patriarchy, defense of teenage girls, ethical grayness, subplot about how awesome books and libraries are, a great twisty plot without a "gotcha" twist.

Would recommend to anyone looking for a good dark read or thriller. Thanks to NetGalley and Sourcebooks Landmark for the free ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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Unfortunately, this just wasn't for me. I didn't connect with anything or anyone in the book. I was so tired of the flashback chapters and they just made the plot more and more convoluted. So many shifts in tone/theme. The writing left little to be desired. I'm glad I don't have to read anymore dialogue consisting of riddles and nursery rhymes. If it had the consistent pace of the last 15% then I would’ve considered giving it a solid 2⭐️ but nope, it dragged it’s heels until the last minute. The ending itself was...a choice. 😂

I wasn't rooting for the romance at any point. The tension and build up to it was anti climatic and dull. Both main characters and all of the religious cult side characters were cartoons, especially her dad. He's basically like a low budget Judge Doom.

Honestly, the only times the story got even close to being interesting was whenever Everett's actually present being a weirdo. Ruth on her own could not carry the story own her own at all. She's supposed to be 23 years old but came across as a delusional 11-year old still stuck in her 2010 obsessive twilight era VERY often. She was constantly insufferable, extremely oblivious and infantilized by every person in town.

Her trying to be a sleuth is almost laughable. You could have blood all over your clothes while holding a severed foot and handsaw and if you told her it's from a bad paper cut, she'd believe you. Every answer is in your face from the start and she's running on hamster wheel fumes.


Thanks to NetGalley and Sourcebooks Landmark for providing a copy for an honest review.

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I loved this book! ❤️ i went into it blind so i think its fair i give you the same opportunity. However i will say it takes place in a small down and deals with religious cults. Enough said. Its interesting from the very first page. Grab it you won't regret it.

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I can always rely on Ashley Winstead to write stories so sensational and twisted that I'll stay up way way too late to finish them in one sitting. Midnight is the Darkest hour was the perfect unsettling southern gothic fiction I was looking for to complete my season of spooky reads.

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Ruth Cornier is a librarian in a small town. Her dad is the pastor of the town's church, a far-right and radical institution. Her best friend, Everett, is almost like the town's pariah. It sounds like this is set in the 1950's, but this is a modern day look at fantastical things, religious and non-religious.

I enjoyed this book. It definitely takes you in different directions, and I loved that there were surprises along the way. Some might see the church and its people as too fantastical, but I think it could be representative of some people's experiences.

It's definitely dark, but the mystery part was still.. fun? Even though it ended up being more character driven than mystery, I think it was a good amount of both. Sometimes thrillers these days are missing dynamic characters, and this one definitely has that in Ruth and Everett.

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